They have ancient traditions handed down orally from generation to generation, honoring the Patriarchs Abram, Moriah (a reference to Isaac and Mount Moriah, where Abram was called to sacrifice his son), and Jacob.
The view was spectacular. Reminiscent of the Grand Canyon, the spacious expanse of Tach Gayint, Ethiopia spread out in front of us. We were 8,500 feet above sea level, and it was breathtaking in every way. Yet in the midst of this incredible beauty were broken hearts and desperate souls.
Should I Convert to Messianic Judaism. By Jonathan Bernis, President and CEO of Jewish Voice I personally don’t believe in a conversion to Messianic Judaism. I believe in a change of heart. Biblically, conversion means “to turn” toward God, but there are many kinds of turnings.
When I came to faith in Jesus as a 16-year- old, Jewish, heroin-shooting, LSD- using, hippie rock drummer, my dad was thrilled to see the change in my life, since I was immediately delivered from drugs. “But,” he said, “we’re Jews, and Jews don’t believe in Jesus.
By Jack KinsellaThe prophet Jeremiah predicted that the Jews of the Babylonian captivity would be restored after seventy years—and the book of Daniel records that prophecy was literally fulfilled after the Babylonians fell to the Persian Empire.
by Sid Roth As we reach out to the Jewish People with the Good News, we activate what I call the Law of Evangelism. When God called the first Jew, Abra- ham, it was with a heart to reach the rest of the world, the Gentiles.
By Jack ZimmermanDo you want to know a secret. No, I’m not talking about the Beatles’ song of the same name. I’m talking about a real, honest-to-goodness, bona fide secret. Ready. Okay, here goes: Yeshua’s existence did not begin in Matthew. Shocked. You shouldn’t be.
By Dr. Raymond L. GannonFirst century Messianic Jewish relations with both the Jewish and new Gentile Christian communities were soundly established upon the obvious realization that New Covenant Messianic faith was divinely poured forth through a Jewish vessel.
By Jonathan Bernis Not all American Jews are liberal. Approximately ten percent of the American Jewish community is Orthodox—meaning they believe the Torah (Genesis through Deuteronomy) to be the Word of God. Many have a vibrant faith and believe prayer touches the heart of God.