Gabriel wrote:page 3 wrote:Many of them are highly educated, and some are ordained rabbis. Jews do believe in Jesus, and their numbers are growing by leaps and bounds.
Secondly, the first sentence "Many of them are highly educated, and some are ordained rabbis" is simply an
appeal to authority and is once again moot and logically fallacious.
I agree. First he claims that it is a gross generalization to say that Jews don't believe in Jesus, and then he makes a gross generalization that (1) says that Jews believe in Jesus and (2) saying that "many educated" when there are no numbers to support this and "some ordained Rabbis", without support here as well.
Now, he does use the following to support that their numbers are growning (Keep in mind that his book was written in 2000)
* 1995 publication of
The Jewish Press quoting the Task force on Missionaries and Cults said "..the so-called Hebrew Christians are capturing Jewish souls at a rate never before "witnessed" in the 3500 year history of the Jewish people".
Which is a statistic that can neither be proven nor disproved, but Michael Brown desired to use this as a proof that Jews are running as fast as they can to Jesus.
He also makes an erroneous claim (by ignoring Luke, and who knows how many others) that:
It is common knowledge to both Jewish and Christian historians that all of Jesus' original followers were Jews...
Again, adding an air of authority that it is unquestionable, while ignoring that Christianity holds that there was at least one Gentile. Now, this may seem like a sticking point, but if this gross generalization, as he calls it, is a problem, he is also using it as well.
He also makes the claim that there have always been faithful Jews who have followed Jesus as the Messiah in every generation.
But he provides no supporting evidence. Where are the ancient synagogues where these Hebrew-Christians worshipped? Where is the evidence that Jews called themselves Jews and worshipped Jesus? Could it have been like Bar Kochba where after a couple of generations there were no more Jews who followed him (forget about worship), and then, many centuries later, Christianity came up with this way to cull the Jews?
While it may sound "reasonable", it is not being backed up with anything to support it.
Anectodal evidence, applying authoritative blessing, and the like. It seems to be a problem.
He also claims that there were about a quarter of a million (more or less) Jewish believers in Jesus in the year 2000. Again, while he loves to provide evidence in other areas, based on his assertion, by quoting that one article, and these base numbers, you would expect that to be at least a half million Jews or even more who follow Jesus.
In other words, he is using numbers to make it look like it is not an abberation, but a rather common and acceptable thing.
A final note, that someone else pointed to:
"believe in" is not even explained, but left as a vague statement that can be interpreted in a number of ways. He quested the Rambam that a Jew who does not believed in the coming of the Moshiach is cut off from the Jewish people. But that is not "believe in" as he has used it. He is taking a reference that contains the same two words, but in a different way, to provide evidence that it is "acceptable".
The context "Jews don't believe in Jesus" actually means "Jews don't worship Jesus", or better yet:
"The majority of Jews who have chosen a religious life have chosen to serve only G-d, and not Jesus".
This would be a better statement, because there is no generalization.