Thursday, September 16, 2010

Visiting a Jewish synagogue

Several years ago, on the Shabbat, which is the Jewish name for the Sabbath, my friend Craig and I attended a conservative Jewish synagogue service. Jewish folks believe in meeting all morning long, so from 9:15 until noon, they read from the Torah, prayed Hebrew prayers, and even meditated on Psalm 150. (“Why don’t we use musical instruments in our service?” the rabbi asked the audience.. “Because if the string on our instrument breaks, we might be tempted to fix it and thus dishonor the Sabbath.”)

Afterwards, we ate lunch with the congregation, actually consuming the stereotypical bagels and lox. Then, thanks to our decade-long relationship with the rabbi, we were invited at 1 p.m. to share the story of Christianity with about 50 Jewish believers. After 35 minutes of a prepared talk where transparency was very evident (i.e. no hiding the gospel through our friendship with the rabbi!), we opened the floor for questions.

What followed was what I would have expected in a Mormon ward. In fact, there was one instance where I—no kidding—had to literally remind myself that we were answering Jews and not Mormons. Here were just some of their many questions:

  • “Are you saying that, unless we accept the Jesus of the New Testament, we will go to hell? But doesn’t God want everyone to go to heaven?”
  • “What do you mean, we are sinners? I’m 85% good!” (My reply: “Well, you’re doing better than I am, and yet you’re still failing 15% of the time.”)
  • “How can you say lusting after a woman is adultery? I still like to look at the ladies.” –said by a man in his 80’s
  • “How is it possible that Jesus is God Almighty? Doesn’t the Bible say God is one?”
There were three or four Holocaust survivors in the audience, and they pointed out the sin of anti-Semitism, even referring to specific times when they personally had been called “Christ-killers.” Humbly, we read from the WEA declaration (“The Gospel and the Jewish People: An Evangelical Statement”) that begins, “We sadly acknowledge that church history has been marred with anti-Semitic words and deeds and that at times when the Jewish people were in great peril, the church did far less than it should have.” And, yes, we must admit that some throughout history have also unfairly treated or attacked the Mormon people.

When the scheduled one-hour talk stretched into an hour and a half, the rabbi finally closed the meeting. Much to our surprise, we did not receive any negative reaction afterward, and a dozen folks waited patiently to talk to us individually. I was able to hand out eight The Case for Christ books (Lee Strobel), while three or four others told me that their friends had already given them copies! (great job, Christians, you’re doing your job!) One elderly Jewish man even asked the rabbi if we could return for further discussion—wow!

But the biggest smile of the day came when a septuagenarian gentleman put his hand on my shoulder and quietly asked, “Do you know how you are a success with our group? You watch how many fall asleep. I always say you are successful with only 10 percent who fall asleep. But nobody fell asleep today!” Those who don’t understand Christianity might not like our message, but many want to hear what we have to say, even if they don’t agree. And if we don’t have answers to these very fair questions, then we are not doing what 1 Peter 3:15-16 commands us to do.

To every man an answer.

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2 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

After a "decade long relationship" with the rabbi and "years in journalism" maybe you should know that Jews don't eat "locks".

10:20 AM  
Blogger Eric Johnson said...

Lox, locks, sounds the same. Lox are the salmon fillets used in Jewish feasts. Give me a break.

8:32 AM  

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