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In This Newsletter

June Discount: 25% Off!

One Day Seminar – Atlanta, GA
"Identity & One Torah"
What's in a Name?
Some Thots on "One Law"

25% Off Nearly All Products for the Month of June
(This discount will be good from now through June 30th)

Take 25% off the retail price during June
To receive the discount, enter the coupon code june25 at checkout.
This discount does not apply to Hebrew & Greek materials or to bulk orders


An Assessment of the "Divine Invitation" Teaching – Tim Hegg

FREE FOR THE ASKING. Simply add this item to your shopping cart. All you pay is shipping and handling.

This is a printed copy of the 69 page review of "'One Law' and the Messianic Gentile", Messiah Journal 101(Aug 2009), previously available only in pdf format. Also included is a CD with the entire booklet read by the author (mp3 format).

If you are still wondering about the issues being raised between "Divine Invitation" and "One Torah," this study will provide plenty of answers.

Printed Copy with Audio CD – FREE
(pay only shipping and handling)




One Day Seminar in Atlanta, GA – November 14, 2010
(165 people have already registered)

"Identity and the One Torah Movement"

An All-Day Seminar
Seminar Speaker – Tim Hegg

Where: Westin Atlanta Airport Hotel

When: Sunday, Nov 14, 2010

Cost: Free (donations to help with expenses will be accepted)

Time: 8:30am – 9:30pm

Click here for More Information & to Register. (There is also a link on the home page of TorahResource.)

 

We are anticipating a great time together at the Atlanta Seminar. Not only will we have the whole day to study and be encouraged in our faith, but it will be an opportunity to meet and fellowship with others of like faith and perspective. 165 people have already registered, so please take a moment to register if you are planning to come, since space is limited.

Even though it is not the same as "being there," we will be video recording the entire day and producing the Seminar on DVD. We will hope to have the recorded Seminar available in January, 2011.

We also have had a number of requests to host a similar Seminar in other parts of the country, and we are giving this serious consideration. If you would like to host a future TorahResource seminar in your area, send us an email.

For those of you who have registered for the Atlanta Seminar, we will be sending you further information and updates via email in the near future.


What's in a Name?

Some Thoughts on "One Law"
Tim Hegg
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In the fractured Messianic Movement, there are still some of us who confess the supremacy of the Scriptures as the final authority for faith and halachah. Though we are sometimes viewed as having a naïve approach to Scripture, reading and studying it outside of its literary context, just the opposite is the case. We receive the Scriptures as the divinely inspired word of God that, by His all-controlling providence, was written by men who were borne along by the Ruach HaKodesh (2Pet 1:20–21). As such, we recognize both the divine and the human element that combined to produce the Bible. Therefore, we work hard to understand the language of any given biblical text in its linguistic milieu, meaning we take seriously the grammatical, syntactical, and literary structure through which the author communicated his meaning. This, of course, requires that we work hard to understand the historical context in which the text was written. But we begin with the premise that within the Bible itself God has given us His self-revelation and thus His will for our lives as we seek to sanctify His Name upon the earth.


Currently we find ourselves embroiled in the age old controversy over what constitutes righteous living for those who confess Yeshua to be the promised Messiah—whether God has one standard of righteousness or if He has various standards for different groups of people. As I noted, this debate is nothing new. It started in Gan Eden when the evil one posed the question: “Has God said?”, and it has continued ever since. Some years ago, when the UMJC was formulating its “Definition of Messianic Judaism,” they began to label our teaching as “One Law.” The label was apparently taken from the Torah itself, where God states that there is to be “one Torah for the native born and for the foreigner” (e.g., Num 15:16, 29). Their position was that some of God’s laws were for everyone, but others were not. They felt that some of God’s laws were given specifically to Jewish people and not to Gentiles because these laws helped maintain a distinct Jewish identity. The conclusion was that Gentiles should not take these laws upon themselves lest they blur the Jewish/Gentile distinction.


When the “One Law” label was first used to identify our position, I was not opposed to it. “One Law” seemed to be a handy description of our understanding of what God revealed in the Torah itself, what Yeshua taught, and what His Apostles instilled in the communities of Yeshua-followers which they founded. But the more I have contemplated this label, given to us by those who are quite certain we are wrong, the more I think it is deficient. I would therefore like to encourage us all to abandon the label “One Law” and rather adopt the label “One Torah.” I have a number of reasons for wanting to make this change.


First, it has become increasingly evident that those who oppose our “One Torah” perspective have given more and more authority to what is commonly known as the “Oral Torah,” that is, the traditions of Rabbinic Judaism. Our use of the label “One Torah,” therefore, will also make it clear that while we appreciate the value of rabbinic literature as offering historical backgrounds out of which the Apostolic Scriptures (in particular) were written, we do not accord the writings of the rabbis as having authority to bind the conscience nor do we give the rabbis the authority to reinterpret the Scriptures. For instance, when Num 15:16, 29 state that “there is one Torah for the native born and the foreigner,” we take the word “foreigner” (ger) in its grammatical, historical sense to mean a person from the nations who has been drawn to faith in Israel’s God. We do not agree with the rabbinic anachronistic reinterpretation that “foreigner” (ger) in these texts is to be understood as a “convert” to Judaism. We stand on the infallible record of God’s “One Torah” and refuse to accept the “Oral Torah” as dictating how we are to read the inspired Scriptures.


Second, using the label “One Torah” will reinforce the well-known fact that the Hebrew word Torah means “teaching,” not “law.” Surely the Torah contains laws, commandments, statutes, ordinances, and so forth, but even these should be understood as communicating God’s teaching about what is righteous and what is unrighteous in His eyes. This speaks to the issue of “commandment” or “law” as mandated. Surely God’s commandments are His requirements or mandates for His people. He did not give us “suggestions.” He revealed Himself to us with the commandment “Be holy, for I am holy.” But if our hearts have been won over by His love; if we have been changed so that we “concur with the Torah of God in our inner man” (Rom 7:22); if we have come to see God’s Torah as “more desirable than gold, yes, than much fine gold,” then we have come to realize that God’s Torah—His teaching—is wisdom itself and we long to know it and to live it. We agree with the Psalmist when he wrote: “Your statutes have been my songs in the house of my sojourn” (Ps 119:54). God’s Torah is not a heavy burden because His yoke fits well and His burden is light (Matt 11:30). So if we abandon the label “One Law” and rather adopt the name “One Torah,” we will be reinforcing that we revere God’s Torah as His teaching about righteousness, gifted to us by His grace ultimately and finally revealed in Yeshua.


I recognize that labels are difficult to change. “One Law” has been a defining term for some years now, and doubtlessly will continue to be used. That’s okay. But I have decided to use “One Torah” to describe my position on this issue, and I encourage you to do the same. In so doing, we will be using a label that better defines our position—a label we have adopted rather than one placed upon us by those who hold the opposite view.