The Rabbi’s Got it Right!

Filed under: Apologetics, Current Events — Barry Carey at 8:22 am on Saturday, March 10, 2007

I appreciate the insight of Rabbi Marc Gellman, senior rabbi of Temple Beth Torah in Melville, New York, into the significance of the resurrection of Jesus Christ for the Christian faith. Having read a number of modern “Christians” who assert that the resurrection of Christ doesn’t matter to Christianity, I find it refreshing that a Non-Christian Jewish rabbi gets it. In a recent Newsweek column, Gellman expresses regret that an orthodox Jewish filmmaker would make such a film. Al Mohler points out here that this is not the most interesting part of Gellman’s column. It is his comments on the significance of the resurrection which are especially worth noting:

If this was indeed the tomb of Jesus, then not only is the Christian Testament false but, worse, Christianity is a cruel deception, à la “The Da Vinci Code,” foisted on the world by Jesus’ panicky followers to help market a faith led by a dead messiah. I don’t think that is how Christianity was born, and I don’t think interfaith relations are improved when a Jewish filmmaker implies such a thing.

Gellman understands that if Christ was not raised (bodily) from the dead, Christianity is a “cruel deception”. He goes on:

Some Christian respondents to this film have said that even discovering the bones of Jesus would not seriously undermine their faith. They say that 2,000 years of tradition does not just get canned because somebody found some bone boxes in the basement of the Israel Museum. I know many Christian clergy who have told me that the main truth of Christianity for them is to love as Jesus loved and that no archeological discovery can change that spiritual lesson. I love these folks but, as an outsider, I just don’t agree that decisive refutation of Jesus’ resurrection would have no effect on Christian faith. Unlike Judaism and Islam and Hinduism and even Buddhism, which are built on God’s teachings, Christianity is built both on God’s teachings as well as on an historical event proving a transcendental miracle.

I find it ironic that Gellman understands Christianity more clearly than many who profess to be Christians. Again, he states:

The divide separating Christians from non-Christians is not between those who think loving all people is good and those who think loving all people is bad. The real divide is between those who believe that Jesus rose from the dead on the third day as proof that he was indeed the Messiah sent by God, and those who do not believe this article of faith and this audacious historical claim.

Mohler summarizes Gellman’s statements as follows:

Yes Rabbi Gellman, this is an “audacious historical claim.” Christians do believe and teach that Jesus Christ rose from the dead — a physical and historical resurrection. The rabbi is absolutely correct in asserting that, if the bones of Jesus had been found in this tomb, Christianity would be proved to be false. Those bones were not found, of course, and the scholarly community has responded to the claim with dismissal and disdain.

The more interesting question is why so many who identify themselves as Christians seem to miss what the rabbi sees. Rabbi Gellman does not believe that Jesus Christ was raised from the dead, but he does believe that Christians must believe that Jesus was raised from the dead. He is right, of course. The rabbi gets it.

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