Books

Messianics for Evangelicals

The Messianic Movement surveys a vast and often confusing realm.

It’s easy for believers—both Jewish and Gentile—to get lost among the various “Messianics” out there. This handbook is a friendly, reliable, spiritual Baedeker. Edited by veteran Jews for Jesus staffer Rich Robinson, it deftly steers readers through a vast and often confusing realm. Not everything called “Messianic Jewish” is either Messianic or Jewish. There are many Gentile pretenders, some of whom don ritual Jewish garb, including the yarmulke (skullcap) and tefillin (phylacteries).

The Messianic Movement:A Field Guide forEvangelical Christians Rich Robinson Jews for Jesus, 198 pp.; $10

The Field Guide offers a concise yet informative history of the Messianic movement and its educational and evangelistic institutions. A section delineates the disagreements Jewish believers in Jesus have with Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, who heads an organization, International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, that gladly receives financial contributions from evangelicals, but that also sternly rejects any notion of Christians’ witnessing to Jews.

The heavily sourced Field Guide is a detailed and useful primer. It is a must-read for those who want to understand the nature of Messianic Judaism today.

Copyright © 2006 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Also posted today is:

All in the Family | Unraveling the church’s confusion about Messianic Jews.

The Messianic Movement: A Field Guide for Evangelical Christians is available from Jews for Jesus.

More on Messianic Judaism includes:

Jacob vs. Jacob | Jewish believers in Jesus quarrel over both style and substance. (Feb. 8, 2005)

Elephant in the Room | Messianic Jews seem to be an embarrassment in an otherwise thoughtful dialogue. (May 18, 2004)

University Forbids ‘Offensive’ Tracts | Messianic Jew sues University of New Orleans over ban. (Sept. 17, 2003)

CT Classic: Do Jews Really Need Jesus? | What evangelicals believe about evangelization of the Jews—and whether the Holocaust makes a difference in that task. (Aug. 16, 2002)

CT Classic: Judaism Under the Secular Umbrella | The best challenges force you to identify yourself. (July 26, 2002) A 1978 interview with Chaim Potok.

Weblog: Dial M For Messianic Jews | Jewish groups fight messianics in phone book (Feb. 18, 2002)

The Return of the Jewish Church | In 1967, there were no Messianic Jewish congregations in the world. Today there are 350. Who are these believers? (Sept. 7, 1998)

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

Missions Incredible

Spong, the Measure of All Things

Living with Tares

Answering Life's Big Questions

God by the Numbers

Evening Prayer

The Almost Formerly Important

A Costly Devotion

A Corrupt Salvation

Winning the Oral Majority

Orality at Home

Christianity Unique Among Religions

Fictionalizing Jesus

All in the Family

Religion and Reconstruction

A Wind that Swirls Everywhere

Too Inclusive

More Money, Less Liberty

Bondage Breaking

Domain Game: Can Jews for Jesus Win Its Google Suit?

Editorial

Loose Cult Talk

News

Christianity Today News Briefs

News

Passages

Grace as a License for Sin

Lives of Quiet Turbulence

Loving the Storm-Drenched

Mission 'Plane of the Future'

The Art of Abortion Politics

Editorial

The Lessons of Jabez

Senator Sam Brownback

News

Go Figure

Prophecy and Politics

Honoring Pioneers

Word and Deed, Again and Again

Costly Complaints

Walking the Talk After Tsunami

For God's Sake

A Delicate Hospitality

The Truth About Deceit

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