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Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

Posted: November 22, 2010 05:44 PM

Every year Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein and the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews raises about $100 million dollars from mostly evangelical Christians in the United States for distribution to social-welfare projects in Israel and the former Soviet Union. This is a staggering sum, making the fellowship arguably the largest foundation for Jews in need in the world. One would think that we in the Jewish community would show immense gratitude to our Christian brothers and sisters for such love. I therefore found it extraordinary, not to mention embarrassing, to hear that there is a growing campaign among elements in the Israeli Rabbinate to discredit the organization and forbid Jewish organizations from benefiting from their funds.

The worst of all character traits in the Jewish religion is to be an ingrate. Denying the goodness that others perform on your behalf leads to a closing of the human heart. No one wants to be taken for granted. So great is the emphasis on appreciation in our religion that our greatest prophet, Moses, is commanded by G-d not to strike the Nile River and turn it into blood in the first plague against the Egyptians because that same river had saved his life when he was a baby. Later, in plague number three, G-d will again warn Moses against smiting the dust of Egypt and turning it into lice because the dust had saved his life when he had to bury the body of a murderous Egyptian taskmaster.

Imagine that. A man who speaks to G-d face to face is told he must show thanks to water and dust. But such is the extent to which Jewish values demands gratitude.

Over the past two decades evangelical Christians have emerged as Israel's most staunch and reliable friends. Pastors like John Hagee, my friend Pat Robertson and countless others have galvanized colossal Christian support for Israel. Even in the worst bombings of the second Intifada, when tourism to Israel fell off a cliff, Christians still came in their millions. The same is true of stalwart Christian political support for Israel. While President Obama continues to bully Israel over apartments in Israel's undivided and eternal capital, Jerusalem, American Christians have a litmus test for their elected leaders. Don't support Israel? You're out.

As I write these lines former President George W. Bush is enjoying a public renaissance in America with the publication of his new book, Decision Points. The President who was the best friend Israel ever had in the White House makes clear, at the beginning of his book, how he turned his life over to Jesus to be saved, and there can be no question that there is a direct link between his deep Christian faith and his love and unyielding support for Israel against those who, like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, seek its annihilation.

I am well aware of our immense differences with the Christian evangelical community. I would venture to say, with no intention at arrogance, that I have conducted more debates against leading Christian scholars and missionaries, like my friend Dr. Michael Brown, on the Messiahship of Jesus and the evangelical insistence that only Christians go to heaven, than any other American Rabbi over the past decade, most of which are available on YouTube. Jesus was a devout and observant Jew for every day of his life on earth. He ate kosher, honored the Sabbath, donned tefillin, insisted on the indivisible unity of G-d, and fought for the independence of the Jewish nation against brutal oppression of Rome, beliefs for which he was ultimately crucified.

It would behoove our Christian brothers and sisters to conclude that they have much more to learn about the authentic historical Jesus from Jews than any misguided attempts at converting them. Indeed, not only must these attempts be emphatically resisted by the Jewish community with overwhelming scholarship, but precisely the opposite is true. Christians must learn from the Jews to reject any deification of Jesus, which he, as a Pharisee, would have seen as the ultimate sacrilege and which is the subject of my upcoming book on the Jewish Jesus. They must follow Jesus as teacher and prophet rather than divinity. Every human being is a child of G-d, and not just Jesus, as the Bible makes clear in Deuteronomy.

But whatever our theological differences with our evangelical brothers, none of this negates the unparalleled kindness and friendship they show Jews and the Jewish community. To say they do this merely to convert us, or because gathering Jews to Israel will usher in the apocalypse, is to perpetrate a sacrilegious act of character assassination. Christians support Israel out of deep love and brotherhood. And it's an act of defamation that even some Christian leaders are guilty of. I was disheartened, in a recent visit to a mega-church in North Carolina, to hear a renowned Christian scholar tell me that the only reason American evangelicals send money to Israel is because they mistakenly believe that the money is being used to proselytize Jews. Bollocks. I meet these evangelicals all the time. I have traveled with great men like Glen Megill of Rock of Africa on Christian relief missions to Zimbabwe, the poorest country on earth, and have listened as they have told me that their first commandment as Christians is to love and protect the Jewish people for no other reason other than G-d commanded it.

The man more responsible than anyone else for building this bridge between Christians and Jews is Rabbi Eckstein, a man whose efforts, with Christian support, feeds thousands of hungry Jewish children and Jewish elderly every day in Israel and abroad.

Israel is a nation that dwells alone, with few friends and many prejudiced enemies. Rather than Rabbis and lay leaders attacking Christians as having nefarious motives for their charity, we should offer thanks and gratitude to hard-working Americans of faith who believe, as the Bible says, that through Israel all the earth is blessed.


Rabbi Shmuley Boteach heads This World: The Values Network, which seeks to heal America through universal Jewish values. An international best-selling author of 24 books, his most recent work is "Renewal: A Guide to the Values-Filled Life." Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.

 
 
 

Follow Rabbi Shmuley Boteach on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RabbiShmuley

 
 
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08:44 PM on 11/26/2010
I am a Christian who considers myself to be culturally Jewish. My support of Israel is founded upon scripture, identity, and unconditional love. Do i support and love Israel believing it to be a perfect nation? No, no nation is perfect as every nation is part of a broken imperfect world governed by imperfect and broken people. Unconditional love is not based upon perfection, the uncondtional love that exists among parrents and children, siblings, close friends, and sposes is love that exists not due to perfection but inspite of inperfection. I love Israel for its culture, and because i have devoted hours of prayer to grow a compassion for Her, and hours imercing myself in her culture. My zionism is not selfish, though scripture speaks of blessings to those who bless israel, this is not a concern of mine, I wish to love as Jesus did, to love the abadoned, the persecuted, the vexed, and the hated. I love and honor the covenants of God and she who is within them.
08:08 PM on 11/26/2010
I am an evangelical Christian-- I don't believe in a rapture and I don't believe that aid to Jews or Israel will hasten the return of the Messiah. I know hundreds of evangelicals who support Israel and the Jewish people and not one of them believes their goodwill brings anything other than a little relief to another human being. I don't know what some of you are reading, but I am curious where you are getting your information regarding evangelical support for Israel. I am active in that world and have never heard such accusations, nor met such a "Christian"...

I am active in gathering Christian support for Israel in my community for the same reasons I invite others to sponsor children from any and all parts of the world. I do it in accordance with the commandments to love goodness, hate evil, and treat others as I would have them treat me. That's it. No ulterior motives-- just a desire to help my fellow humans. And every pro-Israel evangelical I know says the very same thing.
01:18 PM on 11/25/2010
What Boteach's absurd "water and dust" examples actually show is a severe case of misplaced priorities. After all, we are told that God did in fact turn the Nile into blood (killing all the fish and depriving the Egyptians of drinking water), and did smite all the Egyptians with lice — it’s just that the waving of the magic staff in these cases was done by Aaron instead of Moses. The entire bloody Exodus was merely Yahweh’s way of demonstrating his awesome superiority, including killing every Egyptian firstborn. According to Jewish values, then, showing gratitude to inanimate objects is far more important than the suffering of innocent people.
By the way, doing something “for no other reason other than G-d commanded it” is nothing to be proud of (grammatically or morally). The corollary is that if you believed God wanted you to kill your neighbor for being gay, or kill your daughter for not being a virgin on her wedding night, you would do that too. This does not make you a moral person — it makes you a mindless slave and a danger to us all.
Please see my entire critique here: http://norighttobelieve.wordpress.com/2010/11/25/show-thanks-to-water-and-dust/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
janibowe
Doubt = the enemy. Flirting = the ultimate weapon.
03:55 PM on 11/23/2010
I pretty much stand by Obama's so-called "bullying." I'm sick of politicians bending over backwards for a country simply because they believe that it is in their end-time, apocalypse interest to do whatever that country wants.
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Vlady
Better Late
12:38 PM on 11/24/2010
>> I'm sick of politicians bending over backwards

interesting position of yours
11:47 AM on 11/23/2010
What, exactly, are you trying to say here? That Americans who do not view support of Israel as a "litmus test" for their elected leaders are not, in fact, Christian? I imagine there are quite a few Americans who would take offense at this (though as an atheist, I am not among them).
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TexasTreader
Fluffy, the yard dog
12:08 PM on 11/23/2010
Are you sure you're responding to the right article? This is about Jews, Christians and Israel, not American elected leaders.
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Vlady
Better Late
01:49 PM on 11/23/2010
>>though as an atheist

What kind of religion is this?
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Paperless Tiger
11:02 AM on 11/23/2010
Jesus Christus Basileu Basile was a [Byzantine] King of Kings (Emperor) in the Middle Ages. He instituted harsh reforms against the aristocrats and theocrats, who eventually revolted and crucified him. Now go on with your story.
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TheWM
aka The Wrong Monkey
11:45 AM on 11/23/2010
Was that a joke?

http://thewrongmonkey.blogspot.com/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paperless Tiger
01:45 PM on 11/23/2010
Perhaps, for some have said he escaped to Trebizond.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_of_Trebizond
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Snarkyone
10:47 AM on 11/23/2010
This section is always good for some laughs...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Butterfly M
10:19 AM on 11/23/2010
Trojan Horse!
08:20 AM on 11/23/2010
----
As I write these lines former President George W. Bush is enjoying a public renaissance in America...the President who was the best friend Israel ever had in the White House...
----

How do you feel about such a good friend admitting to ordering torture, a criminal act for which Nazis and Japanese soldiers have been convicted?

----
America’s chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg trials was Robert Jackson, on leave then from his post as a Supreme Court Justice. In his initial report to the tribunal, Jackson wrote that the law they enforced must apply equally to all nations. “I am not willing to charge as a crime against a German,” he said, “official acts which would not be crimes if committed by officials of the United States.” That works both ways, of course. And as he prosecuted German officers for waterboarding American soldiers, he said something to the judges of that tribunal that should still echo in our consciousness 60 years later: “The real complaining party at your bar is Civilization.”

http://michiganmessenger.com/383/waterboarding-still-torture-after-all-these-years
----

If you ignore historical moral precedent and buy into the argument that torture is a necessary evil in a ticking time-bomb scenario, you invalidate your own argument when it takes you 83 times to coerce that so-called "time-sensitive" information through waterboarding.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/20/world/20detain.html

Friends don’t let best friends commit war crimes.

- Tom
07:44 AM on 11/23/2010
I thought somewhere in there would be a big 'thank you' to the American taxpayer without whom Israel would not exist.

And until someone produces some actual evidence that Jesus lived, and proof as to what he actually may have done or not done, we need to stop basing geopolitical discussions on a myth.
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danew13
05:26 AM on 11/23/2010
Thanks for the millions yes...but the motive isn't for the love of Jews...it's to fulfill New Testament prophecy...the great in gathering during the end of days and the frosting on top of it all...the rapture into heaven for all those who have accepted Christ.

What Christians have never come to learn is many of their holiest beliefs are rooted in Greco-Roman paganism. read www.hard-truths,blogspot.com
07:42 AM on 11/23/2010
Most of the major religions are based on predecessors. Judaism borrowed a lot of their terms and character archetypes from the Akkadian, Sumerian, and Babylonian myths.
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Vlady
Better Late
01:58 PM on 11/23/2010
>>Akkadian, Sumerian, and Babylonian myths

You forget to add to the list Turks, Armenians, Mexicans and Mongolians
09:46 AM on 11/23/2010
The real agenda of the creators of Christianity is to supplant Judaism with a pro-Roman ideology and pacify the uprising of the Jews against tyranical Roman rule. Christianity completely nullifies Judaism and Mosaic law. Is that what we should be grateful for?
http://www.ivantic.net/Ostale_knjiige/TrueAuthorship.pdf
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Vlady
Better Late
02:04 PM on 11/23/2010
>> Christianity completely nullifies Judaism and Mosaic law.

Right, instead it installed Islam and transformed Mosaic Law into 2nd law of Newton
lastpost
see biography
05:19 AM on 11/23/2010
“Israel is a nation that dwells alone, with few friends and many prejudiced enemies”.
Well, that’s the Uriah Heep approach just about covered Shmuley. What strategy, designed to get your own way, are you going to resort to next?
02:02 AM on 11/23/2010
Very nice and well written, spoken from the heart.

Thank you for your thoughts and works, Rabbi Boteach.

God bless us ALL.
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Vlady
Better Late
02:07 PM on 11/23/2010
Rabbi is a breath of fresh air here
01:34 AM on 11/23/2010
Now how about a column speaking about the ingratitude that Israel shows the Muslims, who for centuries gave shelter to the Jews as the Christians were persecuting and murdering them?
02:42 AM on 11/23/2010
Maybe it's time for ALL of us to drop our stones, lower our voices, and admit that we've ALL been acting like jerks; maybe it's time for ALL of us to embrace logic and compassion and start working together in common cause for the betterment of all. Arabs and Jews have indeed lived and worked together in peace; we can and must do so again. I went to university for a year in Belgium, one Israeli Jewish student among quite a few Arab students--from Morocco, Tunisia, Lebanon, Syria...we attended classes, we cooked together, we partied together, we played soccer together, we tutored each other, we watched the World Cup together, we spent weekends together...in short, we were able to relax and celebrate our unique heritages, our commonalities, our differences, and became friends. They taught me some Arabic, I taught some of them some Hebrew. If there can be a peaceful Israel and Palestine living together, it'll be a good start.
11:34 AM on 11/23/2010
The law just passed by Israel certainly doesn't agree with your sentiments expressed here.

Logic and compassion are the basis for international law, something Israel just thumbed their noses at again.
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ChiBloger
And the truth shall set us ALL free
12:05 PM on 11/23/2010
Zen, thats a nice story. It sounds like the best place to unite Jews and Muslims is outside of the so called holy lands in a civilized nation. Else you are forced to take sides. I am glad that you had this opportunity and which others do as well.
11:23 AM on 11/23/2010
Rabbi Boteach is talking about gratitude for a specific set of human beings that are doing much good - these people themselves. You are correct that Jews were "semi-protected" by muslims - Jewish society flourished in muslim spain for example. However, those were actually different people from todays muslims - they lived long ago. It's all physically different people now in case you hadn't noticed. You show gratitude to actual human beings that do good.
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Semprini
Stamp out and abolish redundancy
12:50 AM on 11/23/2010
"Christians must learn from the Jews to reject any deification of Jesus, which he, as a Pharisee, would have seen as the ultimate sacrilege and which is the subject of my upcoming book on the Jewish Jesus. They must follow Jesus as teacher and prophet rather than divinity. "

I don't envision this going well...
02:46 AM on 11/23/2010
Here's the thing: Jesus/Yeshua of Nazareth was a Jewish teacher who had some decent ideas and workable advice. It was PAUL (and his successors) who perverted the image and teachings of the Jewish Yeshua into a new religion based on "Jesus Christ"--and loaded that new religion with the seeds of hierarchy, misogyny, racism, mysticism, and whatever was convenient to incorporate so as to garner more converts. Personally, I always liked Thomas Jefferson's approach of going through the Gospels and tossing out everything that involved 'miracles' and superstition. That's a good place to begin. Rabbi Yeshua of Nazereth, I can handle; "Jesus Christ, Son of God and Saviour," not so much.
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Semprini
Stamp out and abolish redundancy
03:33 AM on 11/23/2010
Agreed, and in this context he (Jaysus) makes a pretty compelling argument for a sound and reasonable life.

In fact I have tried to follow this model, despite my sometimes bitter feeling about Christianity.

Still I don't think too many evangelical types are going to groove with the "no deity" part.
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HarrietM
It is never too late to start from where you are.
01:42 PM on 11/23/2010
Do you have a link or more information about Thomas Jefferson's approach? I would be interested in reading more about this.