Believe It or Not, Jesus Was a Good Jew [View all]
A new book seeks to challenge this misunderstanding and argues that Jesus wasnt just ethnically Jewish, he was an active supporter of Jewish religious laws.
Jesus of Nazareth is historys most famous carpenter, but he is also, according to one poll historys most famous Jew. He was born to Jewish parents, was circumcised, went to (the) Temple, attended synagogue, and read the Torah. See, hes a first century middle eastern Jew.
Nearly two thousand years of Christianity, however, have presented Jesus as something else: as a religious innovator who was not just in conflict with Jewish authorities, but was actively trying to overturn and replace Judaism. A new book seeks to challenge this misunderstanding and argues that Jesus wasnt just ethnically Jewish, he was an active supporter of Jewish religious laws.
In his recently published book Jesus And the Forces of Death, Dr. Matthew Thiessen, an associate professor of religious studies at McMaster University, looks at Jesus afresh. Its so easy for most Christians to think of Jesus as the first Christian. Which for many Christians today means not Jewish, Thiessen told The Daily Beast, but when Jesus is understood as Christian, the gospel narratives read as though Jesus rejects Judaism and condemns Jews. Jesus becomes anti-Jewish. The legacy of an anti-Jewish Jesus has been felt throughout history and continues even today but that could change. When we realize that Jesus was Jewish, Thiessen told me and the gospel writers wanted to stress Jesuss Jewishness, then we read stories of Jesuss interactions with the Pharisees or Sadducees as inner-Jewish conversations, not some sort of Christian rejection or condemnation of Judaism and the Jewish law.
Thiessen isnt the first to make this point. He builds here on the important work of scholars like Geza Vermes, Paula Fredriksen, Amy-Jill Levine, and Joel Marcus all of whom picture Jesus as thoroughly embedded in ancient Judaism. Whats distinctive about Thiessens argument is the way that he reconsiders debates and interactions between Jesus and other Jewish religious leaders in the Gospels. In particular, Thiessen is focused on ritual purity regulations or what he calls the forces of death. In Jewish law ritual purity regulations govern certain bodily processes (childbirth, menstruation, abnormal genital discharge, skin abnormalities, and death) that both make you impure and are also contagious. To modern Christians, he writes, these seem alien and arcane, but if you want to understand Jesus you have to saddle up because we cannot understand Jesus unless we understand how first century Jews constructed their world.
https://www.thedailybeast.com/believe-it-or-not-jesus-was-a-good-jew