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Messianic Judaism
HaTzvi, June 7; Kol Bo (Haifa),
June 8, 2007

A reporter from the local Haifa paper Kol Bo
(June 8) determined to investigate the "Messianic
Jewish stronghold" in the city, and interviewed
Shmuel Aweida, pastor of Beit Eliahu. Under the title
"Messiah, Messiah" (taken from a popular Chasidic
song), the article opened thus: "'We believe that
the people of Israel are the chosen people, that the
Land of Israel belongs to the people of Israel, and
that God chose the people of Israel to be a light to
the nations.' When these words are said in fluent, unaccented
Hebrew, by Shmuel Aweida, 39, a Christian Arab born
in Haifa, a graduate of a municipal school, they sound
rather surrealistic." The cause of this surrealism
lies in the fact that - as the interviewer, Chana Tal,
points out - Aweida hasn't converted or become Jewish,
but was born an Arab. Aweida's love for Israel - both
land and people - is expressed, in Tal's words, "with
a naturalness that arouses astonishment," leading
her to raise the rhetorical question: "Confusing,
no?"
Describing the service she attended at Beit Eliahu,
Chana Tal noted the amiability of the congregants who
"were willing at any moment to spread the Gospel
that Yeshua the Messiah was born to the Virgin Mary,
crucified, and buried, rose from the dead, ascended
into heaven, and the day is soon coming when he will
be revealed again and reign over the world." Having
spoken of the "angelic singing," she then
described the prayer: "The prayers aren't taken
from a book. They're personal and spontaneous, but with
a fixed content: asking the God of Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob for mercy and compassion, healing for the sick,
and aid to the needy. They also request from the Creator
of the world that He will help the earthly and local
leaders make the right decisions - at this moment, that
Ehud Olmert will be able to stop the rocket attacks
on Sderot and that the mayor will run the city properly."
Under the subheading "Baptism and Bible study,"
Chana Tal noted that "according to their faith,
the first Messianic Jews were Yeshua's twelve disciples
who, following his crucifixion, believed that he was
the Messiah. They were considered traitors by the Jewish
people, and all contact with them was forbidden ...
According to their system, God made a new covenant with
those who believe in Him, which demands that they believe
in Yeshua as the Messiah, Son of David. This belief
is sufficient to gain them entrance to Paradise, without
the duty of observing any [of the] commandments. They
choose to celebrate the Jewish festivals out of identification
with the Jewish people." Tal understood that the
only obligations they feel are imposed upon them are
baptism - "a symbolic declaration of their faith
and new birth" - and communion, which they celebrate
once a month.
According to Tal, the Messianic community in Israel
numbers around 15,000, having doubled in the past ten
years due largely to the influx of Russian immigrants.
The 100 or so congregations across the country "have
names which carry a Jewish character: Mercy, Grace,
Hope of Israel, Israel Lives, Living Water." Claiming
that "the congregation's character is missionary
by nature," Tal addressed the fact that it is consequently
the target of anti-missionary organizations, especially
Yad L'Achim, whose activities "slid over into real
violence against the congregation in Arad and Beersheva."
According to Tal, Yad L'Achim protested against a march
by the "Haifa congregation" in August 2005,
during which the participants handed out literature.
"They were met by Yad L'Achim who loudly announced
'Beware, missionaries! Don't take anything from them!
They want to make you convert' -and promptly led to
the dispersal of the march." In response, Aweida
declared, "We are no more missionaries than the
Chabadnikim who stand at cross-roads and sell books."
When asked by Tal concerning feelings of persecution,
Aweida noted that the congregation has suffered from
graffiti and he himself constantly receives threatening
and abusive telephone calls in which the community is
described as Nazis and Christians. Responding to a specific
question regarding his Arab identity, Aweida said: "I
don't live among them, don't come into contact with
them, don't even speak Arabic. I've never once spoken
to my two brothers in Arabic. I only see Arabs when
I go to buy a shwarma [meat in pita bread]. The Arabs
perceive us as enemies. Whoever believes in the Tanakh
[Old Testament] believes that God chose the people of
Israel and gave them the Land of Israel, and there can't
be a situation in which he will see the Jewish people
as an enemy."
Tal interviewed several young people in the congregation,
most of whom preferred not to reveal their full names.
She also interviewed a former congregant who, having
become a believer, then left the faith, claiming that
it was a cult. At the end of the article, she devoted
a section to Yad L'Achim's attitude toward the Messianic
Jewish community. Overall, the piece was objective and
even positive toward Aweida, the congregation, and Messianic
Judaism in general.
The "largest local paper in Arad and its environs,"
HaTzvi (June 7), carried an article entitled
"Who would believe," featuring a film made
by a twelfth-grader in the communications track in a
local school who "daringly decided to touch on
the most sensitive subject in Arad - the Messianic community
and the dealings with the Orthodox sector." Correcting
itself from indicating that the young woman had "exposed
herself" to say instead that "she had exposed
the truth behind the Messianic congregation in Arad,"
the article maintained that the film's purpose was to
"present the true nature of the Messianic congregation
which stands under the constant threat of the religious,
according to her [the young woman, 'Kati'], something
which is visible in violent tensions in Arad."
The article quotes her words, which indicate that she
is herself part of the Messianic community, in explanation
of the friction: "We don't try to convert anyone
to Christianity or to baptize anyone. We - or I at least
- don't try to influence anyone by my opinion. If someone's
interested or wants to know more about my faith, he
can come and ask me and learn, when it comes from him
and not from me." Despite the fact that other students
have also addressed sensitive and controversial topics
in their films, "this time everyone agreed that
this film was special and moving." According to
Kati, "I thought that someone had to take a step
forward and bring the matter to people's attention."
The article concluded by saying: "The film is 16
minutes long, and tells about the nature of the Messianic
congregation in a documentary fashion, so that interwoven
pieces of life can be seen in it."
Immediately underneath this article, HaTzvi
inserted a second piece, entitled "(A) man shall
live by his faith?" This article described the
recent activities of the anti-missionary organizations
in Arad, including the verbal abuse of a member of the
congregation from outside her own house. "When
they mentioned Hitler and the Messianic Jews in the
same breath and shouted in unison through her window,
the woman evidently summoned the police, who arrived
several minutes later and dispersed the crowd."
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