From:    heb_roots_chr@mail.geocities.com
To:      "Hebraic Heritage Newsgroup"<heb_roots_chr@geocities.com>
Date:    Sat, 27 Dec 1997 01:25:32 +0000
Subject: The Most Famous Jew of All

 

From:        Paula Yulish 
Subject:     The Most famous Jew of All
To:          heb_roots_chr@geocities.com


"As a child I received instruction both in the Bible and in the Talmud. I am a 
Jew, but I am enthralled by the luminous figure of the Nazarene." Albert 
Einstein


"Jesus is a genuine Jewish personality, all his struggles and works, his bearing 
and feeling, his speech and silence, bear the stamp of a Jewish style, the mark 
of Jewish idealism, of the best that was and is in Judaism. He was a Jew among 
Jews." Rabbi Leo Baeck-for many years the religious leader of German Jewry.


"It is a peculiar manifestation of our exile-psychology that we permitted, and 
even aided in, the deletion of New Testament Messianism, that meaningful 
offshoot of our spiritual history. It was in a Jewish land that this spiritual 
revolution was kindled; and Jews were those who had spread it all over the 
land...we must overcome the superstitious fear which we harbor about the 
Messianic movement of Jesus, and we must place the movement where it belongs, 
namely, in the spiritual history of Judaism." Prof. Martin Buber, Philosopher 
and Professor at Hebrew University, Jerusalem


"Jesus was a Jew and a Jew he remained till his last breath. His one idea was to 
implant within his nation the idea of the coming of the Messiah and, by 
repentance and good works, hasten the 'end'...In all of this, Jesus is the most 
Jewish of Jews...more Jewish than Hillel...From the standpoint of general 
humanity, he is, indeed, 'a light to the Gentiles.' " Prof. Joseph Klausner, 
Hebrew University, Jerusalem.


"I couldn't help writing on Jesus. Since I first met Him, he has held my mind 
and heart...I floundered a bit, at first; I was seeking that something for which 
so many of us search-that surety, that faith, that spiritual content in my 
living which would bring me peace and through which I might help bring people to 
others. I found it in the Nazarene...Everything He ever said or did has value 
for us today, and that is something you can say of no other man, alive or 
dead...He became the Light of the world. Why shouldn't I, a Jew, be proud of 
it?" Sholem Asch, Yiddish writer.


"Jesus has become the most popular, the most studied, the most influential 
figure in the religious history of mankind... No sensible Jew can be indifferent 
to the fact that a Jew should have had such a tremendous part in the religious 
education and direction of the human race...Who can compute all that Jesus has 
meant to humanity? The love he has inspired, the solace he has given, the good 
he has engendered, the hope and joy he has kindled-all that is unequalled in 
human history...The Jew cannot help glorying in what Jesus has meant to the 
world; nor can he help hoping that Jesus may yet serve as a bond between Jew and 
Christian, once his teaching is better known and the bane of misunderstanding at 
last is removed from his words and his ideal."  Rabbi Hyman Enelow, past 
President of the Central Conference of American Rabbis.



"Neither Christian protest nor Jewish lamentation can annul the fact that Jesus 
was a Jew, an Hebrew of the Hebrews. Surely it is not wholly unfit that Jesus be 
reclaimed by those who have never unitedly nor organizedly denied him, though 
oft denied by his followers; that Jesus should not be so much appropriated by us 
as assigned to the place in Jewish life and Jewish history which is rightfully 
his own. Jesus was not only a Jew but he was the Jew, the Jew of the Jews...In 
that day when history shall be written in the light of truth, the people of 
Israel will be known not as Christ-killers, but as Christ-bearers; not as 
God-slayers, but as God-bringers to the world." Rabbi Stephen Wise, Zionist 
leader and founder of the Jewish Institute of Religion.


"We certainly do not get in the Hebrew Bible any teacher speaking of God as ' 
Father'...like the Jesus of Matthew. And this habitual and concentrated use 
rightly produces upon us an impression...we are moved by it to wish that we too 
could feel that doctrine, even as Jesus teaches that we ought to feel; and that 
we, too, could order our lives in its light and by its strength." C.G. 
Montefiore, Reform Jewish Scholar.


"Jesus was utterly true to the Torah, as I myself hope to be. I even suspect 
that Jesus was even more true to the Torah than I, an Orthodox Jew. I accept the 
resurrection of Easter Sunday not as an invention of the community of disciples, 
but as an historical event...I believe that the Christ event leads to a way of 
salvation which God has opened up in order to bring the gentile world into the 
community of God's Israel." Dr. Pinchas Lapide, Orthodox scholar


"Perhaps, too, in this enlightened age, as his mind expands, and he takes a 
comprehensive view of this period of progress, the pupil of Moses may ask 
himself, whether all the princes of the house of David have done so much for the 
Jews as that prince who was crucified on Calvary." Benjamin Disraeli, Former 
Prime Minister of Great Britain

All quotations, except that of Dr. Pinchas Lapide, may be found in "The 
Messiahship of Jesus: Are Jews Changing Their Attitudes Towards Jesus?" by Dr. 
Arthur Kac (Baker Book House, 1986). Dr. Lapides's book is "The Resurrection of 
Jesus" (Augsburg Publishing House,1983).


"For a child will be born to us, a son will be given to us; and the government 
will rest on His shoulders; and His name will be called Wonderful Counselor, 
Mighty God, Eternal Father, Prince of Peace." Isaiah 9:6

A Blessed Holiday season to all of you at this time that we commemorate the 
birth of the Son, Yeshua; the Mighty God, Eternal Father, the Prince of Peace, 
"The Most Famous Jew of All"

Baruch Hashem 

Stephen and Paula Yulish

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