They said that if I continued down this path, there would be consequences.

I asked them what kind of consequences.

They told me I would lose my position as rabbi.

I would be expelled from the rabbitical council.

My children would not be allowed to attend Jewish day schools.

My family would be ostracized from the community.

No one would speak to us.

we would be treated as dead.

Then they made me an offer.

If I would publicly renounce these ideas, if I would burn the New Testament and affirm my faith in traditional Judaism, all would be forgiven.

We would never speak of this again.

My position would be secure.

My family would be safe.

All I had to do was deny what I believed to be true.

I looked at these men, men I respected, men who genuinely thought they were saving me from destruction.

And I thought about Peter, one of Yeshua’s disciples, who denied knowing him three times out of fear.

I thought about the apostles who were beaten and imprisoned for preaching about Yeshua, and who rejoiced that they were counted worthy to suffer for his name.

I told them I couldn’t do it.

I told them that Yeshua was the Messiah, that I believed it with all my heart, and that I would not deny him, no matter what it cost me.

They left, and I knew that I had just signed my own death warrant, at least as far as my life in the Orthodox community was concerned.

That night, I couldn’t sleep.

I walked through my house looking at everything we had built.

The muza on every doorpost, the Jewish books lining the shelves, the photos of our children at their bar and bat mitzvah, the marriage certificate from our wedding, my rabbitical ordination hanging on the wall.

All of it was about to be lost.

Rachel wasn’t speaking to me.

The children were confused and scared.

My parents called and begged me to come to my senses.

My mother cried on the phone, telling me I was killing her, that after everything they had done to raise me in the faith, I was throwing it all away.

I went outside and stood in my backyard looking up at the stars.

It was a clear night and I could see thousands of them.

The same stars Abraham had looked at when God promised to make his descendants as numerous as the stars in the sky.

And I prayed.

I prayed harder than I had ever prayed in my life.

God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, if I’m wrong about this, show me.

If Yeshua is not the Messiah, if this is all a deception, please reveal it to me.

I don’t want to destroy my life for a lie.

But if he is who he claimed to be, if he is really the Messiah, then give me the strength to follow through with this because I’m afraid.

I’m so afraid.

I stood there for a long time waiting for something.

a sign, a voice, some clear indication of what I should do.

What I got instead was peace.

Not a dramatic experience, not a vision or an audible voice, just a deep, overwhelming sense of peace that settled over me like a blanket.

A certainty that I was exactly where I was supposed to be, doing exactly what I was supposed to do, no matter how hard it was.

Ah, and along with that peace came words dropping into my mind not from my own thoughts but from somewhere else.

I am the way, the truth, and the life.

No one comes to the father except through me.

I went back inside and straight to my study.

I sat down at my desk and I wrote two letters.

The first letter was my resignation as rabbi of the congregation.

I explained that I could no longer in good conscience lead them because I had come to believe something that they did not believe.

I told them that I loved them, that serving them had been the honor of my life, but that I had to follow the truth wherever it led.

The second letter was to the president of the synagogue board.

I asked to speak to the congregation one more time on the following Shabbat.

I wanted to explain myself.

I wanted to tell them what I had discovered and why I believed it.

I owed them that much.

The president called me the next day.

He sounded tired and sad.

He told me that the board had discussed my request and they were granting it.

I could speak on Shabbat, but after that I would need to leave and not come back.

I spent the next week preparing what I would say.

I wrote out my testimony, how I had discovered the messianic prophecies, how they pointed to Yeshua, how he had fulfilled the requirements of the Torah, how he was the sacrifice we needed.

I practiced it over and over trying to find the right words to help them understand.

Rachel moved out.

She took the children and went to stay with her parents.

Before she left, she stood in our bedroom with tears streaming down her face and told me that I had to choose her or Jesus.

Our family or this insanity.

I told her that I loved her more than my own life, but that I could not deny the truth.

I told her that Yeshua didn’t ask me to stop being Jewish.

He was the most Jewish thing about me.

He was the fulfillment of everything we had been waiting for.

She shook her head and walked out.

I heard the car doors slam.

I heard the engine start.

I stood at the window and watched my family drive away.

The house was so quiet.

I spent that week alone preparing for the most important speech of my life.

And I prayed constantly asking God for the right words, asking for courage, asking for his presence.

I had no idea if anyone in the congregation would listen.

I had no idea if this would make any difference at all.

But I knew I had to try.

Shabbat came.

I woke up early and dressed in my rabbitical clothes for the last time.

Hey, I put on my tallet, my prayer shawl, and I prayed the morning prayers.

Then I drove to the synagogue, parked in my usual spot, and walked through the doors I had walked through thousands of times before.

People were already gathering for services.

Some looked at me with pity, some with anger, some with confusion.

A few wouldn’t make eye contact at all.

I took my place at the front.

The service began.

We prayed the prayers I had prayed since childhood.

We read from the Torah.

And then it was time for me to speak.

I stood up.

I looked out at the congregation.

And I began to tell them about the greatest discovery of my life.

The discovery that would cost me everything.

The discovery that would set me free.

I don’t remember everything I said that morning.

I have notes from the speech I prepared.

But in the moment, a standing there in front of 300 people who were about to reject me, a lot of what came out of my mouth was spontaneous.

It was from the heart.

It was everything I had been holding inside for nearly 2 years finally being released.

I started by telling them that I loved them, that serving as their rabbi had been the greatest privilege of my life, that I had married their children, buried their parents, celebrated with them in joy, and mourned with them in sorrow.

I told them that what I was about to say was not coming from a place of anger or rebellion or deception.

It was coming from a place of deep conviction, from a journey I never wanted to take but couldn’t avoid.

Then I told him about the question from my student Josh, about Isaiah 53, about how that one question had started me on a path I never expected.

She I watched their faces as I spoke.

Some were already angry.

I could see it in the set of their jaws, the way they were gripping their prayer books.

Some looked sad.

Some looked confused.

But they were listening.

For now they were listening.

I walked them through the prophecies one by one.

Isaiah 53.

I read it aloud in Hebrew, letting the words hang in the air.

He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows, acquainted with grief.

We hid our faces from him, but he was wounded for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities.

The punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his stripes we are healed.

I asked them what we had always been taught about this passage, that it was about Israel suffering among the nations, that it was metaphorical, symbolic, not about an actual person.

But then I pointed out what the text actually says.

It’s not written in the first person.

It’s written about someone else.

The speaker says, “We we esteemed him stricken.

We hid our faces from him.

And he he was wounded.

He was crushed.

He bore the sins of many.

Israel talking about someone who suffered for Israel.

And it says he did this willingly.

He was oppressed and afflicted.

Yet he did not open his mouth.

Like a lamb led to the slaughter.

Like a sheep silent before her sheerers, he did not open his mouth.

someone suffering voluntarily, silently to bring healing and peace to others through his wounds and his death.

I paused and let that sink in.

Then I moved to the next prophecy, Psalm 22, David’s psalm.

It starts with the words, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” And then it describes a scene of suffering that is eerily specific.

Dogs surround me.

A pack of villains encircles me.

They pierce my hands and my feet.

All my bones are on display.

People stare and gloat over me.

They divide my clothes among them and cast lots for my garment.

This psalm was written a thousand years before Rome existed.

It was written hundreds of years before a crucifixion was invented.

And yet it describes a crucifixion in perfect detail.

The piercing of hands and feet, the bones being pulled out a joint, the nakedness, the dividing of garments, even the emotional state of someone dying this kind of death.

I saw people shifting uncomfortably in their seats.

Some were whispering to each other.

I continued, “Daniel chapter 9, the prophecy of 70 weeks.

” I explained how Daniel had been given a vision of 70 weeks of years, 490 years total, that would pass from the decree to rebuild Jerusalem until the Messiah would come and then be cut off, killed.

I walk them through the math starting from the decree of art Xerxes in 445 BCEE adding 483 years you arrive at approximately 33 CE right around the time Yeshua was crucified and the prophecy says the Messiah would be cut off before the destruction of the temple.

The second temple was destroyed in the year 70.

Which means if Daniel’s prophecy is accurate, the Messiah had to have come and died before the year 70.

That was 2,000 years ago.

If we’re still waiting for the Messiah, then Daniel was wrong.

But if Daniel was a true prophet, and we believe he was, then the Messiah already came.

We missed him.

I could hear people starting to object now.

Someone in the back stood up and walked out, but I kept going.

Zechariah 12 10.

God speaking, they will look on me, the one they have pierced, and they will mourn for him as one mourns for an only child and grieve bitterly for him as one grieavves for a firstborn son.

How can God be pierced? How can God die? And yet here is God saying that they will look on him, the one they pierced.

Micah 5:2.

But you, Bethlehem Ephraatha, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.

The Messiah would be born in Bethlehem, but he would have origins from ancient times, someone both human and eternal.

I went through more prophecies.

Genesis 3:15, about the offspring of the woman who would crush the serpent’s head.

Genesis 22 about Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son Isaac and God saying that on this mountain the Lord will provide a sacrifice.

Numbers 24:17 about a star coming out of Jacob.

Deuteronomy 18 about a prophet like Moses who would come.

Isaiah 7:14 about a virgin conceiving.

Isaiah 9:6 about a child being born who would be called wonderful counselor, mighty God, everlasting father, prince of peace.

Each prophecy by itself could perhaps be explained away.

But taken together, they formed a portrait.

A specific portrait of a specific person.

Someone who would be born in Bethlehem of a virgin from the line of David who would be both human and divine.

Who would suffer and die for the sins of his people.

Who would be rejected by his own.

Who would be buried and then rise again.

who would bring salvation not just to Israel but to the whole world.

And there was only one person in all of history who fit that portrait.

I told them his name, Yeshua of Nazareth, Jesus.

The reaction was immediate and visceral.

People gasped.

Someone shouted that I was a heretic.

Mrs.

Levy, who had been with the congregation for 40 years, put her hand over her mouth and started crying.

Rabbi Kleinman, my old mentor, just sat there shaking his head with tears running down his face, but I couldn’t stop now.

I had gone too far to turn back.

I told them about the sacrificial system, about how the Torah commands that without the shedding of blood, there is no forgiveness of sins, about how for 1500 years from Moses until the destruction of the temple, we had dealt with our sins through blood sacrifice.

A lamb, a bull, a goat, the innocent dying in place of the guilty.

The principle of substitutionary atonement was built into the very fabric of our faith.

But then the temple was destroyed and for 2,000 years we have had no sacrifice, no blood, no atonement in the way that God prescribed in Torah.

We have tried to replace it with prayer and good deeds and repentance.

The rabbis tell us that God accepts these instead of sacrifice.

But where in Torah does God say that? Where in scripture does God say that blood is necessary until it’s not? That his law can be set aside when it becomes inconvenient.

Unless there was a sacrifice, a final sacrifice, a perfect sacrifice that was so complete, so effective that it dealt with the sin problem once and for all.

A sacrifice that happened right before the temple was destroyed.

As if God was saying, “You don’t need the temple anymore.

You don’t need the repeated sacrifices anymore because I have provided the ultimate sacrifice, the lamb of God, the one that John the Baptist pointed to when he saw Yeshua and said, “Behold the lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.

” I looked out at my congregation and I told them about my journey, about the months of study, the sleepless nights, the desperate prayers, about how I had tried to prove this wrong, tried to find another explanation, tried to go back to the comfortable certainty of what I had always believed.

But I couldn’t because the evidence was overwhelming.

The prophecies were too specific.

The fulfillment was too perfect.

The logic was too clear.

Yeshua had fulfilled the Torah, not abolished it.

He had completed the sacrificial system, not destroyed it.

He had come to Israel first, just as the prophets said the Messiah would.

He had taught in the temple, celebrated the feasts, quoted the prophets, called himself the son of man, the title from Daniel’s vision.

He had done everything the Messiah was prophesied to do.

And we had rejected him, not because the evidence wasn’t there, not because he didn’t fulfill the prophecies, but because he didn’t fulfill them the way we expected.

We wanted a conquering king who would overthrow Rome and restore Israel’s political power.

We got a suffering servant who would overthrow sin and restore humanity’s relationship with God.

We wanted the second coming before the first coming.

I told them that I understood why our fathers rejected him 2,000 years ago.

I understood why the Pharisees and the religious leaders felt threatened by him.

He was challenging their authority, their interpretation of Torah, their entire system.

He was saying that all the regulations and traditions and fence laws they had built around Torah were missing the point that God wanted mercy, not sacrifice.

that the Sabbath was made for man, not man for the Sabbath.

That you could follow every rule perfectly and still miss God entirely.

This was dangerous teaching, revolutionary teaching.

And they did what people in power always do when someone threatens their system.

They eliminated the threat.

But God had the last word.

Yeshua rose from the dead.

He appeared to his disciples.

He appeared to over 500 people at once.

He proved that he was exactly who he claimed to be, the Messiah, the Son of God, the resurrection, and the life.

And his followers, all Jews, every single one of them, went out and turned the world upside down with this message.

Not because they were deceived, but because they had seen him alive after they had watched him die, because they had touched his wounds and eaten with him and listened to him explain how all of scripture pointed to him.

They were willing to die for this message, and most of them did.

People don’t die for something they know is a lie.

I was weeping now as I spoke.

I told them that I knew what this meant for me.

I knew I was about to lose everything.

My position, my reputation, my community, possibly my family.

I knew that most of them would never speak to me again, that they would mourn for me as if I had died.

But I couldn’t deny what I knew to be true.

I had found the Messiah.

I had found the fulfillment of everything we had been waiting for.

And once you’ve seen the truth, once you’ve encountered the living God in the person of Yeshua, you can’t go back.

You can’t pretend you don’t know.

I looked at them through my tears and I said, “I haven’t abandoned Judaism.

I haven’t left the faith of our fathers.

I have found what our fathers were looking for.

I have found the one that Moses wrote about, the one that David sang about, the one that Isaiah prophesied about.

I I haven’t become less Jewish.

I’ve become complete.

Yeshua is not the enemy of the Jewish people.

He is the hope of the Jewish people.

He is the light to the nations that Isaiah spoke of.

He is the chute from the stump of Jesse.

He is the son of David who will reign forever.

He is Emmanuel, God with us, and he is waiting for us to recognize him.

The service erupted into chaos.

People were shouting, some were crying.

A group of men rushed toward the Beimma.

I saw Aaron Levenson, the synagogue president, trying to restore order, but his voice was lost in the noise.

Rabbi Kleinman stood up slowly, leaning on his cane.

He looked at me across the room and there was such sadness in his eyes, such disappointment.

He didn’t say anything.

He just turned and walked out.

That hurt more than all the anger around me.

Aaron made his way through the crowd and took my arm.

He told me gently but firmly that I needed to leave.

I nodded.

I removed my tallet and folded it carefully, then placed it on the podium.

Under Jewish law, I was dead to them now, dead to the community.

They would sit Shiva for me the traditional seven days of mourning.

My name would be erased from the synagogue records.

As they escorted me out, I could hear someone beginning to recite Kadesh, the morning prayer, the prayer we say for the dead.

I walked through the sanctuary one last time, past faces I had known for decades.

Some turned away, some glared at me with open hatred.

A few looked confused and sad.

One woman, I won’t say her name, reached out and briefly touched my hand as I passed.

A small gesture of kindness in the midst of all that rejection to the doors closed behind me, and I stood in the parking lot in the bright morning sun.

Birds were singing, cars were passing on the street.

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