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Question about converting to Messianic Judaism

MichaelNZ

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I'm curious to know if Messianic Jews have to be 'ethnically Jewish' (i.e. born of a Jewish mother or if non-Jews can become Messianic Jews.

I know that Judaism has a halachic conversion process which involves going before a beit din, circumcision (for a man) and immersion in a mikvah, but does Messianic Judaism have the same, or a similar procedure? Is there a way for non-Jews to become Messianic Jews?

Also, what is the Messianic view on baptism? Is it practiced at all?

Thanks in advance.
 

Gxg (G²)

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I'm curious to know if Messianic Jews have to be 'ethnically Jewish' (i.e. born of a Jewish mother or if non-Jews can become Messianic Jews.

I know that Judaism has a halachic conversion process which involves going before a beit din, circumcision (for a man) and immersion in a mikvah, but does Messianic Judaism have the same, or a similar procedure? Is there a way for non-Jews to become Messianic Jews?

Also, what is the Messianic view on baptism? Is it practiced at all?

Thanks in advance.
Shalom :)

To my knowledge, it is only the case that Gentiles can never become Jewish ethnically simply because of desire..although they can live Jewish if they wish--as it concerns Messianic Judaic living. If nothing else, you may wish looking into the UMJC (if looking them up online)/seeing what they have to say. I've noticed from your icon that you're Anglican--and wanted to note that there are others who are Messianic Jews and yet they work within the Anglican Church.

As it concerns Baptism, the MJish view is that it is something the apostles and Christ themselves participated in (Matthew 3:5-7 , Mark 10:38-40 , Mark 16:15-17 , Luke 7:29-31, Acts 2:37-39 , Acts 8:11-13 , Acts 9:17-19 , Acts 10:47-48, Acts 16:14-16 , Acts 18:7-9, Acts 19:4-6 , Acts 22:15-17 , etc)--and in honor of that action, as well as the action it symbolizes and how Christ commanded for new believers to be baptized, it is actively promoted. It is not necessarily a requirement of salvation--but rather, it is done as a symbolic act of being transformed by the work/power of the Messiah :) Of course, with Baptism, are you asking on whether or not it's done...or are you thinking more alongside the mode of Baptism (i.e. sprinkle vs immersion, children baptized vs baptized only when an adult, etc)?
 
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CrystalB

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I am a Gentile believer. With the Fellowship I attend when I can, there is no conversion process. The rabbi believes that the Gentile believers are to stay Gentile and the Jewish believers are to stay Jewish and that both Jews and Gentiles are to come together.
 
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Tishri1

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I am a Gentile believer. With the Fellowship I attend when I can, there is no conversion process. The rabbi believes that the Gentile believers are to stay Gentile and the Jewish believers are to stay Jewish and that both Jews and Gentiles are to come together.
thats it in a nutshell:thumbsup: very well put:thumbsup:
 
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anisavta

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I am a Gentile believer. With the Fellowship I attend when I can, there is no conversion process. The rabbi believes that the Gentile believers are to stay Gentile and the Jewish believers are to stay Jewish and that both Jews and Gentiles are to come together.
:thumbsup:
 
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Henaynei

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MichaelArchangelos said:
I'm curious to know if Messianic Jews have to be 'ethnically Jewish' (i.e. born of a Jewish mother or if non-Jews can become Messianic Jews.

I know that Judaism has a halachic conversion process which involves going before a beit din, circumcision (for a man) and immersion in a mikvah, but does Messianic Judaism have the same, or a similar procedure? Is there a way for non-Jews to become Messianic Jews?

Also, what is the Messianic view on baptism? Is it practiced at all?

Thanks in advance.

The responses so far in this thread are correct. But you may also want to know that there is a growing movement in some areas of MJism where a Messianic conversion of a committed Messianic Gentile to be a Messianic Jew is practiced and accepted.

b'Shalom {iPod touch w/CF app}
 
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Gxg (G²)

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I know that Judaism has a halachic conversion process which involves going before a beit din, circumcision (for a man) and immersion in a mikvah, but does Messianic Judaism have the same, or a similar procedure? Is there a way for non-Jews to become Messianic Jews?
.
Most of the main groups in Messianic Judaism make plain Gentiles are remain as such and tying to convert into a Jew is akin to going against the purpose of why Christ came/the way He redeems Gentiles. One good resource to consider is Conversion: Do Gentiles Need To Convert To Messianic Judaism?" and The Case for "Defacto" Conversion: Building Messianic Jewish and Messianic Gentile Households -Kesher Journal of Messianic Judaism ....

Additionally, one of the main groups, known as the UMJC, actually shared on the issue in-depth...as seen here in Does the UMJC Practice Conversion? and Conversion Position Paperhot.
 
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MichaelNZ

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Thanks to all the replies and the resources.

I am a Gentile believer. With the Fellowship I attend when I can, there is no conversion process. The rabbi believes that the Gentile believers are to stay Gentile and the Jewish believers are to stay Jewish and that both Jews and Gentiles are to come together.

In your Fellowship, are Gentile believers allowed to get an Aliyah to the Torah, or is that something reserved for Jews? If Gentiles are allowed to, at what point would a person coming from "traditional Christianity" be allowed to get an Aliyah? After they'd simply attended services for a few months?

Also, are Gentile believers required to observe all the mitzvot of the Torah, or indeed any of them? Are they permitted to observe any of the mitzvot? Is it possible for a Gentile believer to practice Messianic Judaism the way Jewish believers do (e.g. keeping Shabbat, attending synagogue, having mezuzot on doorposts, dressing in black, wearing a yarmulke and having peyos)?

What about Jewish believers? Are they required to observe all the mitzvot? Are they observant like regular Jews but just believe in Jesus? Also, do Messianics (both Jews and Gentiles) keep kosher?
 
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Jerushabelle

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I'm curious to know if Messianic Jews have to be 'ethnically Jewish' (i.e. born of a Jewish mother or if non-Jews can become Messianic Jews.

I know that Judaism has a halachic conversion process which involves going before a beit din, circumcision (for a man) and immersion in a mikvah, but does Messianic Judaism have the same, or a similar procedure? Is there a way for non-Jews to become Messianic Jews?

Also, what is the Messianic view on baptism? Is it practiced at all?

Thanks in advance.

No, people expressing Messianic Judaism do not have to be ethnically Jewish. Messianic Judaism consists of both Jews and Gentiles; all one in Yeshua. I encourage you to read Romans 11:17-25 for Scriptural understanding.

Conversion implies a change of belief; going from one belief system to another. In Messianic Judaism, Jews remain Jews. Gentiles remain Gentiles. We come to Yeshua as we are and we stay as we are. Messianic Judaism takes care not to go the way of the Galatians, making proselytes out of Gentiles, which Paul admonished them for in his letter to them. A relatively recent movement within Messianic Judaism has been advocating this but it is not accepted by all in Messianic Judaism because too much Scripture has to be ignored to support it.

Yes, mikveh, or baptism in Greek, is a practice of Messianic Judaism. It is the washing of all to be clean before God and since "all" is the requirement, full immersion is practiced.

As far as circumcision is concerned, I would encourage you to read Genesis 17:9-14, Deut.10:16, Deut. 30:6, Jeremiah 4:4 as well as Romans 2:25-26, Ephesians 2:11-16 and 1 Corinthians 7:17-24 for a complete understanding of circumcision as it pertains to Jew and Gentile in Yeshua in both the heart as well as the flesh.

The important thing to remember when seeking answers about Messianic Judaism, is that all practices are defended and supported in all of Scripture. And when we search for what is found in all of Scripture, we take care also to note what is not there.
 
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jehoiakim

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I think crystal had a very good point. The Jews are to be a light to all nations... and the prophecies say men from ever nation tribe and tongue will bow before Gos, so I beleive as gentiles we are called to remain gentiles... although I am what you would call or working on becoming a messianic gentile. I hope one day to be fully Torah observant, and respectful of the oral law, but I do not see it as necessary for salvation, and I do not do it to "become jewish" nor pretend to be jewish, but to develop a deeper understanding of what God has done in the past and to better understand his plans for us in the future
 
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Jerushabelle

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I think crystal had a very good point. The Jews are to be a light to all nations... and the prophecies say men from ever nation tribe and tongue will bow before Gos, so I beleive as gentiles we are called to remain gentiles... although I am what you would call or working on becoming a messianic gentile. I hope one day to be fully Torah observant, and respectful of the oral law, but I do not see it as necessary for salvation, and I do not do it to "become jewish" nor pretend to be jewish, but to develop a deeper understanding of what God has done in the past and to better understand his plans for us in the future

:thumbsup: Except you can keep the oral law/Talmud, IMO. Yeshua commissioned us to teach His gospel and commandments to the world, and not for us believers to be the students of those who failed to recognize the time of His visitation.
 
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Chaplain David

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Please any good MJ feel free to answer.

Do the majority of MJ's, kind of like the mainstream MJ's like Baptist are mainstream Christian's, (and I'm not saying MJ's are not Christian's), do MJ's pretty much follow the Talmud? I'm not talking about those who just seem to have one foot in the door but solid MJ's.?:groupray:
 
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Gxg (G²)

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Please any good MJ feel free to answer.

Do the majority of MJ's, kind of like the mainstream MJ's like Baptist are mainstream Christian's, (and I'm not saying MJ's are not Christian's), do MJ's pretty much follow the Talmud? I'm not talking about those who just seem to have one foot in the door but solid MJ's.?:groupray:

Personally, from what I've seen (limited experience of course), there are alot of MJs who reference the Talmud due to how it is a historical document that was present within the culture/time of Christ. UMJA (Union of Messianic Jewish Congregations), for example, has actually referenced the Talmud on differing occassions (seen here or here) . The Pharisees referenced it, as do many Jewish circles today..and the IMJA (International Messianic Jewish Alliance) utilized discussion on Talmud on a myriad of subjects ( seen here and here ). There's alot of variation as it concerns the Different Streams of Messianic Synagogues (and their believers )...

For more in regards to the Talmud referenced by Messianic believers:
Also, there are some excellent articles such as the following:

One doesn't have to believe that all aspects of the Talmud are inspired in order to believe that it is indeed useful at many points...

.
The Messiah often quoted from when discussing with others. One doesn't have to believe that all aspects of the Talmud are inspired in order to believe that it is indeed useful at many points. Even when many Rabbi's didn't agree that Christ was the Messiah, Jesus still REFERENCED them.


As said elsewhere, many of the things Christ said in Matthew 23 were not really NEW......as much of what He said came DIRECYTY from the Pharisees own teachings. For the Talmud reveals that hypocrisy was not unknown among the Pharisees...as a famous passage in the Talmud denounces six types of hypocritical Pharisees (BT, Sotah, 22b), which speak of many of the same faults pointed out by Jesus. The Talmudic literature clearly condemns pretense and hypocrisy (JT, Berakoth f. ix, 7; 13 ), and from this there can be no doubt that these vices constituted special problems for Pharisees.

This is an important point because the literature of the Pharisaic tradition in no way sanctions hypocrisy. It is, in fact, in agreement with Jesus...and we must not make the mistake that the early writers of the oral tradition were all corrupt and blind. For though there can be no doubt that hypocrisy existed among the Pharisees during the time of Jesus, the reality is that Jesus was not simply coming up with things out of the hat when denouncing them.


For more info, one can go online and look up a source under the name of "Babylonian Talmud: Tractate Sotah " ( //come-hear.iahushua.com/sotah/sotah_22.html ). As said here:
AND THE PLAGUE OF PHARISEES etc. Our Rabbis have taught: There are seven types of Pharisees: the shikmi Pharisee, the nikpi Pharisee, the kizai Pharisee, the 'pestle' Pharisee, the Pharisee [who constantly exclaims] 'What is my duty that I may perform it?', the Pharisee from love [of God] and the Pharisee from fear. The shikmi Pharisee — he is one who performs the action of Shechem.4 The nikpi Pharisee — he is one who knocks his feet together.5 The kizai Pharisee — R. Nahman b. Isaac said: He is one who makes his blood to flow against walls.6 The 'pestle' Pharisee — Rabbah b. Shila said: [His head] is bowed like [a pestle in] a mortar. The Pharisee [who constantly exclaims] 'What is my duty that I may perform it?' — but that is a virtue! — Nay, what he says is, 'What further duty is for me that I may perform it?'7 The Pharisee from love and the Pharisee from fear — Abaye and Raba said to the tanna [who was reciting this passage], Do not mention 'the Pharisee from love8 and the Pharisee from fear'; for Rab Judah has said in the name of Rab: A man should always engage himself in Torah and the commandments even though it be not for their own sake,9 because from [engaging in them] not for their own sake, he will come [to engage in them] for their own sake. R. Nahman b. Isaac said: What is hidden is hidden, and what is revealed is revealed; the Great Tribunal will exact punishment from those who rub themselves against the walls.10

Notes:
4. Who was circumcised from an unworthy motive (Gen. XXXIV). The J. Talmud (Ber. 14b) explains: who carries his religious duties upon his shoulder (shekem), i.e., ostentatiously.

5. He walks with exaggerated humility. According to the J. Talmud: He says: Spare me a moment that I may perform a commandment.

6. In his anxiety to avoid looking upon a woman he dashes his face against the wall. The J. Talmud explains: calculating Pharisee, i.e., he performs a good deed and then a bad deed, setting one off against the other.

7. As though he had fulfilled every obligation.

8. [Abaye and Raba understood 'love' and 'fear' to denote love of the rewards promised for the fulfilment of precepts and fear of punishment for transgressing them. In J. Ber., however, they are both taken in reference to God — i.e., love of God and fear of Him.]



If it was the case with Christ that He, being a Jew, could reference material from His own Jewish background and culture that also involved thoughts not directly supporting Him, then referencing something from the Talmud seems to be legitimate provided it doesn't contradict what Yeshua noted :)
 
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Gxg (G²)

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I think crystal had a very good point. The Jews are to be a light to all nations... and the prophecies say men from ever nation tribe and tongue will bow before Gos, so I beleive as gentiles we are called to remain gentiles... although I am what you would call or working on becoming a messianic gentile. I hope one day to be fully Torah observant, and respectful of the oral law, but I do not see it as necessary for salvation, and I do not do it to "become jewish" nor pretend to be jewish, but to develop a deeper understanding of what God has done in the past and to better understand his plans for us in the future
Feeling what you said..
 
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Chaplain David

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While I and certainly the OP appreciates the participation so far. I think this thread and request to know more about converting to MJ would greatly benefit from input from other MJ members, both new and old.

I know it always helps me to hear from others as it has in my information thread so if some other members of the MJ forum would respond, it would be really good.

Also, while not MJ, answers from Jews are also helpful and informative.
 
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Gxg (G²)

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While I and certainly the OP appreciates the participation so far. I think this thread and request to know more about MJ would greatly benefit from input from other MJ members.

I know it always helps me to hear from others as it has in my information thread so if some other members of the MJ forum would respond, it would be really good.

Also, while not MJ, answers from Jews are also helpful and informative.
Would probably be best to go directly in seeing what other Messianic Jews have noted in mainstream MJism, as most of the answers are often noted there. Info is info, regardless of the source.. and the best places to go are perhaps directly from those who are the most prominent leaders in Messianic Jewish leadership (i.e. Jews who are true followers of Messiah). MJAA, UMJC, MaozIsrael, or a host of others. Nonetheless, it's always beautiful to see the diversity reflected in what other MJish members in their own personal experiences/moments edify others with :) Same with people who are Jews, as what's happening in mainstream Judaism often is an indicator of what other MJish fellowships are either mirroring on certain levels or trying to be aware of in their own developments.
 
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Chaplain David

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Easy G (G²);60411596 said:
Would probably be best to go directly in seeing what other Messianic Jews have noted in mainstream MJism, as most of the answers are often noted there. Info is info, regardless of the source:)
Actually I think it would be extremely helpful and certainly more personal if members from the MJ forum responded. A personal connection is always better and I know the way they responded with love to me has touched me and actually helped me warm up to MJ more than I would than just getting info from you tube.

So I think, should they desire, if other forum members would respond it would be really helpful to the OP.

God bless.

Shalom
 
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Gxg (G²)

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I think it would be extremely helpful and certainly more personal if members from the MJ forum responded. A personal connection is always better and I know the way they responded with love to me has touched me and actually helped me warm up to MJ more than I would than just getting info from you tube.
Personal connections always make a world of difference, as it concerns sharing what's lived out (whereas what's given from simple information on a knowledge level may not be the same...the difference between, in example, someone learning about spiritual gifts online like healing and then having a personal testimony from others who experienced it rather than only giving out the informational side of how things work):)

The only factor that often makes a difference, of course, is when the personal side can come up/get involved and yet may differ from the information or knowledge side of things (i.e. saying that celebrating the Feasts isn't important in MJish fellowships from the personal level but not really checking if it lined up with what MJish leadership in leading organizations have noted, be in articles or video presentation)...but there's a wealth of experience that truly is beautiful when it comes to sharing how life is like for others. Sister Crystal B gave some excellent examples (As others noted) of how life is within MJish circles..which can be quickly confirmed by what the informational side of MJism notes when it comes to mainstream teaching/thought since it was noted for a long time. The nature of info really...

There was alot more discussion from older discussion by other MJish members, seen in threads such as Oh no! Where can I get a menorah?? ...and more extensive discussion/debate in Messianics and Talmud.
So I think, should they desire, if other forum members would respond it would be really helpful to the OP.
Indeed :)

God bless.

Shalom
Shalom :)
 
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. Yeshua commissioned us to teach His gospel and commandments to the world, and not for us believers to be the students of those who failed to recognize the time of His visitation.

There is the reality that Yeshua was a student even of those who may not have recognized Him, as seen in the ways he referenced their teachings/rabbinical customs and the Talmud. Yeshua was a student and as such he enjoyed/took time to learn the nuances of the culture he was born into. Same thing, if we're to emulate him/understand Him, would be good for our times today as Brother jehoiakimnoted.
 
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