MIDRASH-
The Camel's Nose MIDRASH: THE CAMEL'S NOSE
What do we need the term Midrash for? Is it an extra-Biblical knowledge that
one cannot gain from the Bible itself, or is it a fancy name for something all
Bible scholars know anyway? I declare that this "Midrash" (being one of the latest
fads among the exponents of the Hebrew Roots Movement) is just "the camel's nose";
and as the Bedouin parable goes: if the camel is allowed to stick his nose in
the tent, before long, the whole camel will be in the tent. The "camel" in my
illustration is the newest attempt at Judaizing Christianity by the exponents
of the Hebrew Roots Movement. The law and the prophets were until John:
since that time the kingdom of God is preached, and every man presseth into it.
First, we are just being asked to acknowledge the "possible" superiority
of the Jewish system of interpretation (midrash) in contrast to the so-called
"obvious" flaws in the Protestant system of Biblical interpretation. Next, we
are asked to consider how pleasing to God it would be if we would just observe
a few of the feasts of the Old Testament: They say, "After all, they were instituted
by God!". Having gone that far, it is only another inch away to have an altar
of incense in your own church, and while you're at it, why not blow a shofar to
announce the beginning of the next revival? (All of these things are now and already
being done by some supposedly orthodox Protestant churches). BUT WAIT!
If you are going to attempt to be faithful to a more primitive and "purer" exercise
of your faith, you might as well go all the way. Whatsoever you do, do with all
of your might, right? Don't you think it would be good if you men would cover
your head when you are in worship, as they do in every synagogue and in many "messianic"
congregations? And don't forget that we are already being reminded that Jesus
Himself wore a prayer shawl. You do want to look like Jesus, don't you?
Now that you have entered the realm of serious reverence and observation of
the "holy", don't you think that you should honor Yeshua by His correct name?
Oh! That might be Yehoshua or Yehoshea; SORRY, I can't remember what they're calling
Him this week. And while you're at it, G-d is the proper spelling for the title
of deity; please do not transgress by actually spelling it out like so many irreverent
slugs have done in the past: how pretentious of them that they dare to pronounce
the "ineffable vowel"! Have you heard yet what those Christian scholars
have done to your Bible? They HAVE LIED TO YOU! They didn't tell you that your
New Testament was originally written in Hebrew (not Greek): and THAT (of course)
is why you don't really understand it! Don't worry, you will soon be able to get
your own copy of the New Testament that has been reconstituted back into the Hebrew
from the Greek and then retranslated back into English for you. And don't forget:
Sabbath starts at sun-down on Friday. Hey! How did that camel get into
my tent? BUT IT'S ONLY THE CAMEL'S NOSE! As I
began to look into this matter, and read some of the information available on
the internet, I decided to carefully examine an article on the subject, written
by Jacob Prasch, who is a leading advocate for "Midrashic Interpretation". Mr.
Prasch is a highly educated and well respected man with many friends and supporters.
Although he claims to be an outspoken opponent of the Hebrew Roots Movement, per
se, it is his stated agenda to reintroduce into Christendom the Midrashic system
of Biblical interpretation. Why? Because he judges the Protestant system to be
deficient and fundamentally flawed. The rest of this article shall
be a critical analysis of Jacob Prasch's article entitled, An Explanation of Midrash,
which was published on the internet, Last Update: 27-09-97 http://www.cw.co.za/moriel/
Copyright © Jacob Prasch 1996. I noticed just today that this article has
been updated again as of Jan.31, 1999. The title has also been changed to "Midrash",
but remains substantially the same. I will send the original article as downloaded
from the Moriel web site to anyone that requests it. All quotes, unless
otherwise identified are from Jacob Prasch's article. JACOB PRASCH'S
EXPLANATION OF MIDRASH "The clearest set of guidelines in Midrash
are the Seven Midroth attributed to Rabbi Hillel, the founder of the Pharisaic
School of Hillel, where Rabbi Shaul (St. Paul) was educated as a rabbi by Rabbi
Gamaliel, the grandson of Hillel." He begins his presentation of midrash
by letting us know of his intimate knowledge of the subject and personalities
involved. The only problem with the experts he presents is that (excepting Paul
the apostle) they are all exponents of the Pharisee's school of interpretation
that Jesus repudiated. Paul the apostle is now being called "Rabbi Paul": a title
never assigned to him in the New Testament. Prasch continues by explaining
a little about the midrashic method: "Midrash makes heavy use of allegory
and typology to illustrate and illuminate doctrine, but never as a basis for doctrine.
It sees multiple meanings in Bible texts found in strata, but this is very different
in certain fundamental respects from the gnostic and Alexandrian uses of figurative
interpretation associated with Philo and Origen, reflecting more of Hebraic, rather
than Helenistic philosophical world-view and view of theology." In
other words, Jacob would recommend Midrash because it is superior to the Alexandrian
and gnostic hermeneutic? BUT WAIT A MINUTE: what in the world do these things
mean? Does Alexandrian refer to the Septuagint (Greek Old Testament translated
in Alexandria)? Does it refer to certain heretics that once lived in Alexandria?
But"..aren't most Old Testament quotations in the New Testament taken from the
Septuagint? Weren't those heretics completely repudiated at the Council of Nicea?
"and what does Prasch mean by Gnosticism? How many of you who are reading this
can tell us exactly what Gnosticism is? Quite simply, Gnosticism is an archaic
word for mysticism. But what is mysticism? Mysticism (in it's Christianized form)
holds that the plain and universal (i.e. the Bible) cannot be understood rightly
without a prior knowledge of something which is neither plain nor universal. Gnostics
insist that you cannot understand the Bible unless you know "their secret" first.
But for most of you, isn't this Midrash being presented to you as the "secret
key" of "right interpretation" that you NEED and don't yet have? Regarding
midrashic interpretation of prophecy, Jacob asserts: "Midrash interprets
prophecy as a cyclical pattern of historical recapitulation (prophecies having
multiple fulfillment), with an ultimate fulfillment associated with the eschaton,
which is the final focal point of the redemptive process." The fact
that Jacob presents this as a new concept is astounding. Multiple and partial
fulfillments of prophecy have long been noted amongst Christian Scholars. This
is, from my perspective, the most troubling aspect of midrash, in that the significance
of prophecy as predictive and destined for a very specific and literal fulfillment,
is diminished under the idea that prophecy is essentially a description of cyclical
patterns of spiritual realities. Is this not how so-called "Replacement Theology"
came into being? Is this not how the future Millennium was replaced by the then
present dominion of the Holy Roman Empire once upon a time? Is this not how the
post-Christian Jews re-explained the "Suffering Servant" of Isaiah 53, so that
they didn't need to admit that Jesus LITERALLY fulfilled those prophecies?
"Not prediction, but pattern the Jewish idea of prophecy is not prediction,
but pattern." The "patterns" that midrash would bring to our attention
are clearly there, but to use this fact to change the definition of prophecy from
predictive to primarily a commentary on the cycles of history is obviously an
attempt by traditional rabbinicism to evade the mountain of predictive prophecy
that was fulfilled in Christ. There may be, and probably is much of
interest in midrashic literature, but I would liken it unto ornaments: interesting,
even intriguing, but NOT necessary to understanding the Bible. No! We don't "NEED"
this Midrash; and especially now, when it has become "the camel's nose" of the
Hebrew Roots Movement. Considering the purely empirical evidence of
the providence of God, let me remind you that He has seen to it that the Christian
Bible is everywhere and generally available to anyone - He has not seen fit to
make the Midrash generally available. Hence, God Himself did not deem it necessary
or even sufficiently helpful in our understanding of Scripture. JACOB
PRASCH'S ATTACK ON PROTESTANT THEOLOGY "Midrash incorporates a
grammatical-historical exegesis, vaguely similar to the western models of Biblical
interpretation that the Reformers borrowed from 16th century Humanism, but it
sees this as simply a first step." (underline added by me) In the first
place, the Reformers defended "literal-grammatical" interpretation not "grammatical-historical."
I want you to notice that the author begins his slander by innuendo against the
Reformers by suggesting that they were little more than disciples of the Humanists,
and that without midrash that they had only taken one step which did not carry
them far enough and that without the principles of midrash, we are still in the
clutches of medieval darkness. That the reformers insisted upon literal-grammatical
interpretation is well known. Luther pointedly says, "I here once more
repeat, what I have so often insisted on, that the Christian should direct his
efforts toward understanding the so-called literal sense of the Scripture, which
alone is the substance of faith and of Christian theology, which alone will sustain
him in the hour of trouble and temptation, and which will triumph over sin, death,
and the gates of hell, to the praise and glory of God." (bold and underline added
by me) SOURCE: George N.H. Peters (Lutheran); The Theocratic Kingdom
(1884); volume 1, page 48 {Kregel Limited Edition Library; Kregel Publishers;
Grand Rapids, Michigan} Prasch continues his denunciation of Protestant
interpretation: "If you look at the way the New Testament quotes the
Old Testament, it is clear that the apostles did not use western Protestant methods
of exegesis or interpretation." Often typical of his style, Prasch
makes assertions like this to the effect of displacing historic orthodoxy, without
a shred of supporting evidence, except to make statements like the following:
"Jesus was a rabbi. Paul was a rabbi. They interpreted the Bible in the
way other rabbis did-according to a method called Midrash." And in
contradiction to his stated objections to the Hebrew Roots movement, Prasch says
this: "Something went wrong in the early Church; it got away from its
Jewish roots. And as more Gentiles became Christians, something that Paul (in
Romans 11) warned should not happen, happened. People lost sight of the root."
First of all, it is impossible for ANY student of the Bible to miss the
significance of our "Jewish roots". This is absurd. The entire Old Testament constitutes
Hebrew History, and I would be willing to bet that most Christians are more familiar
with Jewish History than they are of the history of their own nation. and the
New Testament has always said that we who are saved, now belong to the commonwealth
of Israel. Second of all, if there has been a diminution of attention
to Jewish culture, traditions, or hermeneutic principles, the "fault" can be laid
to the charge of Jesus and Paul. Jesus said: (Mat 23:38) Behold, your
house is left unto you desolate. Would you think from this statement
of our Lord, that He was advocating that we should look to the Pharisees for instruction
in the Faith? Paul, in his epistle to the Galatians, discredited the
Judaizers, and furthermore leveled a curse against them or anyone who preached
any Gospel that was different from the Gospel that he preached. Paul even rebuked
Peter for being a respecter of persons in his Jewish sympathies (Gal. 2:11-18).
And again: (Rom 10:1-2) Brethren, my heart's desire and prayer to God
for Israel is, that they might be saved. {2} For I bear them record that they
have a zeal of God, but not according to knowledge. No, not once do
we read that Jesus or any of the apostles recommend that we resort to the traditions
of the first century Jews for training in biblical interpretation or righteousness.
Jesus, Himself, denounced the Pharisees' handling of the Scriptures, and said
that they were guilty of: (Mark 7:13) Making the word of God of none
effect through your tradition, which ye have delivered: and many such like things
do ye. Regarding training in righteousness, Paul also warns against
some of the persistent influences of the Judaizers when he says this:
(Col 2:16-17) Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect
of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days: {17} Which are a shadow
of things to come; but the body is of Christ. Some of the things denounced
by this statement include the false requirements of Saturday Sabbath observance;
and there are others in the up and coming Hebrew Roots movement who are now insisting
that we as Christians should be observing some or all of the Old Testament dietary
laws. It is quite clear that we have been steered away from Jewish
traditions and the Jew's religion by our Lord Jesus Christ and Paul, both of whom
Prasch wishes to enlist on his side of the argument. He hasn't got a leg to stand
on. And then, Prasch looks to make a great and revered man an offender
for a word: "Augustine said things like, The only good thing about
marriage is having children who will be celibate. The Manichaeans, who said that
the first sin was having marital relations, introduced these ideas into the Greek
world. That is why, to this day, Roman Catholicism cannot handle sexuality, and
why it has so many restrictions and hang-ups, and why Roman Catholics are even
hung about marital sex. "People began reinterpreting the Bible, not
using the Jewish method of midrash, but using Greek methods." The quoted
statement of Augustine, is admittedly extreme: but one should consider this statement
by Augustine as reactionary to his own past. It is well known that Augustine had
a tawdry lifestyle before his conversion; he himself confessed that the temptations
of the flesh were for many years a major obstacle between him and the Christian
faith. There is no doubt that Augustine does advocate celibacy as a superior state
for full-time ministers of the Gospel, but this is in harmony with Jesus and Paul
(Matt. 19:11-12, I Cor. 7:1, 7, 32-34) . The Manichaeans have long been identified
as an heretical cult; but since when did we need an entirely new system of Biblical
interpretation to rescue us from heresies that are already condemned by Orthodoxy?
WHAT IS MIDRASH? Jacob says: "Unless someone has been
educated in Judaism, Hebrew, or theology, it is easier to demonstrate midrash
than to explain it." Can't explain it? Neither can anyone else, apparently.
After doing a brief survey on the subject, I found that some call it just a collection
of homiletics. Jacob Prasch calls it an hermeneutic principle, which is the "scholars'"
term for, "principles of interpretation". So let's get down to the nub on this
matter: Mr. Prasch asserts that historical Christian Biblical interpretation has
been flawed, almost from the beginning, because we didn't stick with the Jewish
methods of interpretation that Jesus denounced. He says that Jesus Christ, Himself,
and Paul, used the midrashic system of biblical interpretation, which he asserts
to be superior to the grammatical-historical system, while ignoring the fact that
it is the literal-grammatical system of interpretation that defines historic Protestant
orthodoxy. "Midrash uses typology and allegory-symbols-in order to
illustrate and illumine doctrine. For instance, Jesus is "the Passover Lamb".
The symbolism of the Jewish Passover perfectly illustrates the doctrine of atonement,
but we never base the doctrine of atonement on the symbolism. The symbolism illustrates
the doctrine, which is itself stated plainly elsewhere in Scripture."
Typology, allegory and symbols have been understood as literary modes in the
Bible from the beginning. We never needed a new principle of interpretation to
point these things out. QUESTION: is Midrash something we have always known, or
is it something we haven't yet known? If it is something we have always known,
then why must we introduce a new piece of exclusivist jargon, whose only final
result is to nominate a new school of scholars to reign over us? Jacob
takes up his attack on the Reformers once again: "The Reformers came
along and tried to correct what had gone wrong in medieval Roman Catholicism.
Unfortunately, although the Reformers were dynamic personalities, they were not
dynamic thinkers." Having shown that the Roman Catholic system of Biblical
interpretation was seriously flawed, which I figure all Protestants agree with,
Prasch is now going to show us why the Protestant theologians did no better, by
issuing his judgement that these men weren't too bright to begin with. And then,
he introduces a lie: "The Reformation was born out of something called
Humanism. (Note: the first Humanists were not secular, they were Christians.)
The best of the Humanists were men like Thomas A Kempis, John Colet, and Jacques
Lefèvre. But the greatest of them all was Erasmus of Rotterdam. Luther,
Calvin, Zwingli and most of the other Reformers got their ideas from Erasmus."
There is no question that the movement referred to as Humanism arose before
the cataclysmic events of the Reformation, but the proposition that Luther, Calvin
or Zwingli got their ideas from Erasmus, is laughable. I know and many know that
Luther actually took his cues from Augustine and Hus. This is a patently false
characterization which ignores the fact that Luther was a head-on and potent enemy
of Erasmus. Apparently Prasch never read Bondage of the Will, which is Luther's
vehement diatribe against Erasmus' doctrine. Erasmus lived and died a good Catholic:
he never saw any reason to denounce or depart from the RCC on doctrinal grounds.
"Erasmus and the other Humanists attempted to study and teach the Bible
in its plain literal meaning, in order to undo the medieval abuses of Roman Catholicism.
They placed the emphasis on reading the Bible as literature and as history,
and gave us the system of grammatical-historical exegesis that has been used in
the Protestant churches ever since." Please note the subtle innuendo
against those whose legacy we all still realize the benefit of. First, Luther,
Calvin, Zwingli and Erasmus are all put into the same basket, as if they all shared
the same views and aims. (Luther to Zwingli: "I slap thy spirit on the snout").
Then they are identified as just "Humanists". Then it is intimated that they regarded
the Bible as just literature and history. Finally, their legacy he calls "grammatical-historical
exegesis", which is indeed in vogue these days, but it is also the system which
has been largely a product of the Apostasy of Christendom, in that it is a system
of interpretation that denies the present day perspicuity and relevance of the
Bible. Prasch presumes upon the ignorance of his audience; that they will not
know the difference between literal-grammatical and grammatical-historical, and
he's probably right about much of his audience: but he's not right about the Protestant
theologians. Jacob continues his attack: "The problem with
the Reformers is that they only went so far. They made rules governing the application
of their grammatical-historical system in order to refute medieval Roman Catholicism,
and many of those rules are still taught in theological seminaries today.
"such rule is this: There are many applications of a Scripture but only
one interpretation. That is total rubbish! The Talmud tells us there are multiple
interpretations. Who did Jesus agree with? The Reformers? Or the other rabbis?"
What impertinence! The question is not who Jesus agrees with, the question
is: Who agrees with Jesus? By and large, the reformers did, but what about the
Rabbis? The rules of literal-grammatical interpretation of Scripture
are self-evident: Before you start looking for other incidental meanings and applications,
you begin by receiving the plain conveyance of the words according to all the
normal rules of definition and grammar, which include the universal rhetorical
devices of metaphor, allegory, simile, symbol, type, and etc. The historical-grammatical
view (by it's title) implies that a knowledge of the setting in which the words
were spoken is necessary to rightly grasp the object and import of the words.
In other words, only a first century Jew really knew what Jesus meant. The "grammatical"
component of this system infers that figures of speech in the Bible are now detached
from their original reference points, and cannot be understood without being retranslated
according to the new principle of "dynamic equivalence". The "grammar" in this
system does not refer to the grammar of the language to which the Bible was translated,
but to the grammar of the language the translation was made from. Prasch's Midrashic
system is precisely the "historical grammatical" school - for he implies that
without an intimate knowledge of first century culture and Hebrew grammar, we
cannot fathom the intended meaning of the words and phrases in the Bible.
The Reformation assertion that "there are many applications of a Scripture
but only one interpretation," is indeed reactive against the errors of Romanism,
but is also just as reactive against the Midrashic hermeneutic. I have read with
my own eyes the proposition by rabbis that there are at least 40 interpretations
of every Scripture and as many as 75 different interpretations. Anyone who spends
their time looking for 40 interpretations of a verse of Scripture, is, in all
probability, only trying to avoid the obvious. EXAMPLES OF MIDRASHIC
INTERPRETATION EXAMPLE ONE: THE SIGN OF JONAH "Jesus
said, A wicked and adulterous generation asks for a miraculous sign! But none
will be given it except the sign of the prophet Jonah (Matthew 12:39).
"What was "the sign of the prophet Jonah"? In one place Jesus says it was this,
that "as Jonah was three days and nights in the stomach of a huge fish, so the
Son of Man will be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth" (Matthew
12:40). "But, at the same time, He says that it was the fact that the
men of Ninevah repented at the preaching of Jonah (Luke 11:32). The Gentiles would
repent when the Jews didn't, that is also the sign of the prophet Jonah. He gave
two equally co-valid interpretations of what that sign is. "So, where
Protestant hermeneutics say that there is only one interpretation, all the rest
is application-it is out of step with Jesus." Here it is again, a straw
man called "Protestant hermeneutics". It is inconceivable that any honest scholar
would disagree that the repenting of Ninevah was also a sign of Jonah as was his
three days and three nights in the stomach of a huge fish. Jacob's indictment
that the "Protestant hermeneutic" forecloses against receiving both the resurrection
and the repentance of the Gentiles as the one true interpretation of this prophecy
is groundless. It is apparent to me that Jacob Prasch has an agenda, and that
agenda is to subtly bring historic Biblical scholarship into disrepute while suggesting
that we should acknowledge the inherent superiority of Jewish hermeneutics (and
of course, become students of those who teach these things). "Another
rule of Reformed Hermeneutics says that, if the plain wording of Scripture makes
sense, seek no other sense. Take it at its face value, full stop. That is also
total rubbish!" I have never read nor heard anyone propose that the
riches of Scripture are confined to a single sense. This is just another blow
against the straw man that Jacob has erected to do battle with. Obvious to anyone
who reads it: the admonition to receive the plain wording of Scripture, is a polemic
against the practice of many to evade the plain language of the Bible.
EXAMPLE TWO: JOHN 1-3 "A First or Second Century Jewish
Christian reading John's Gospel, chapters one, two and three, would have said
it was the new Creation narrative-the story of the new Creation. "He
would have seen that God walked the earth in Genesis, and now God walked the earth
again in the new Creation in John. "He would have seen that the Spirit
moved on the water and brought forth the Creation in Genesis, and now the Spirit
moved on the water and brought forth the new Creation in John. "He
would have seen that there was the small light and the great light in the Creation
in Genesis, and now there was the small light-John the Baptist-and the great light-Jesus-in
the new Creation in John." Does anyone object to this interesting view
of the first 3 chapters of John? I don't. But neither do I for a minute believe
that early Jewish Christians thought that this view was the primary purpose and
intent of these chapters. The primary message of these chapters is the identity,
eminence, and pre-existence of Jesus Christ the Son of God, and the promise of
life through Him and Him alone. Having received the primary and plain sense of
these Scriptures, we are not in any way prevented from recognizing the harmony
and unity of the Old and New Testaments: we have no need of something called "Midrash"
in order to see these Divinely inspired features . If Midrash was presented
by Mr. Prasch as nothing more than worthy reading because of the many insightful
expositions that can be found there, I would have no objection whatsoever to his
recommendation. But, he doesn't stop there, and actually intimates that unless
our principles of interpretation are abandoned in favor of Midrashic principles,
that we are in danger of seriously misapprehending what our Bible intends for
us to understand. Jacob says: "By reading the Bible as literature and
history, as the Humanists did, you only see part of it. The Humanists were reacting
to medieval Scholasticism and the Gnosticism that much of Roman Catholicism is
based upon. Nonetheless, their approach prevents people from seeing much of the
depth of Scripture." There is no doubt that the Reformers were reacting
to the Gnosticism and medieval Scholasticism of Roman Catholicism: but their reaction
was mainly against simple and generic infidelity to the Bible. The oft quoted
Reformation formula "Sola Scriptura - Sola Fide" admits to no need for a Jewish
hermeneutic or an historical perspective. Prasch's intimation that the Reformers'
solution to the errors of those times was that the Bible ought to be read as "literature
and history" characterizes those Reformers as impotent fools who had no idea what
the problem really was. The "Humanists" were certainly guilty of Mr.
Prasch's charge, but by inferring that the Reformers were no different than the
secular Humanists, this well informed and usually astute scholar is bearing false
witness. He knows that the common conception of what a Humanist is today, has
little in common with what it meant to be a Humanist in the sixteenth century.
By failing to make the distinction between social-political Humanism and contemporary
Religious Humanism, Mr. Prasch appears to being playing to the prejudice of his
audience in order to make the Reformers appear all the more unreliable and trivial.
Jacob continues to antiquate the usefulness of the Reformers' influence:
"Using the grammatical-historical method, the Reformers were able to discover
truths such as Justification by Faith and the Authority of Scripture. But that
is all they could see; they could not go beyond it." While still insisting
that their principle of Biblical interpretation was grammatical-historical instead
of literal-grammatical, he accuses them further of being hopelessly short-sighted.
Never mind that the truths of Justification by Faith and the Authority of the
Scriptures, WERE the particular controversies of the Reformation. Never mind that
until these crucial matters were agreed upon that there was no point in introducing
other and distracting subjects. Now Mr. Prasch goes after Martin Luther
in particular: "Martin Luther considered Romans to be the main book
of the Bible. He totally rejected the Book of Revelation. Yet the Book of Revelation
is the book for the Last Days. Luther admitted that you cannot understand it with
a Protestant mind. "What is wrong? Is the Book of Revelation wrong?
Or is the Protestant mind wrong?" Yes, Martin Luther considered Romans
to be the most pertinent book of the Bible in his day. The assertion that Luther
"totally rejected" the Book of Revelation as if he would have it removed from
the canon is a gross mischaracterization. I agree that Luther did not pretend
to understand the book of Revelation, but then, he wasn't in the Last Days, was
he? The fact is, in Luther's day there was virtually no one who presumed to understand
the book of Revelation. It is the unfortunate consequence of historical
greatness, that every loose and errant word ever spoken by great men is recorded
- but none of us would like to be totally characterized by our own "loose and
errant" outbursts. Shall we now denounce Martin Luther and most of what he stood
for? Prasch uses Luther's openly confessed consternation to suggest
that Luther's approach to the Bible, and YOUR'S, have fallen prey to the "Protestant
mind" which he openly declares to be a fountain-head of error and short-sightedness.
"When you see people writing out diagrams and charts, saying that they
have got the whole eschatological program and all of Revelation figured out, be
very cautious. It is sealed up until the appropriate time. "God will
unveil it in His way and in His time. And that will be done step by step. The
first step is going back to reading the Bible as a Jewish book, instead of as
a Greek one." Another brick in the wall: Now you are being notified
that unless you learn Midrash, you don't have a gnat's chance of ever understanding
apocalyptic prophecy. Furthermore, He has already informed you that you cannot
understand Midrash without being educated in Judaism and Hebrew. So here we are:
We need Jacob Prasch to expain all these things to us, since he is the only expert
on these matters that we know about. Watch Out! The camel's nose is already in
the tent, and if you look you can see all those camels lining up behind him.
MIDRASH ON PROPHECY "There are different kinds of
prophecy in the Bible. The two kinds that are important in understanding the Last
Days are Messianic prophecies and, connected to those, eschatological prophecies.
"When we come to consider biblical prophecy, this is very important. Because the
Western mind, with its basis in Sixteenth Century Humanism, says that prophecy
consists of a prediction and a fulfillment. To the ancient Jewish mind, it was
not a question of something being predicted, then being fulfilled. That is a wrong
view of biblical prophecy. "Rather, to the ancient Jewish mind, prophecy
was a pattern which is recapitulated; a prophecy having multiple fulfillment's.
And each fulfillment, each cycle, teaches something about the ultimate fulfillment."
Now it is precisely upon this point that I most object to the intrusion
of this interpretive system of the Jews called Midrash. To view prophecy as consisting
of "prediction and fulfillment," Jacob asserts, "is a wrong view of biblical prophecy."
Thus, (Hosea 11:1) When Israel was a child, then I loved him, and called
my son out of Egypt, is a prophecy, where the son that was called out of Egypt
is no longer a predictive prophecy fulfilled in Christ alone, but just one of
those things that keeps happening over and over again throughout history: Abraham
came out of Egypt, Israel came out of Egypt, Jesus came out of Egypt, and we who
are saved, came out of Egypt. Thus says Jacob Prasch: "Very plainly,
Hosea chapter 11 is talking about the Exodus, about what happened with Moses.
In its grammatical-historical context, it is talking about the Exodus, not about
the Messiah." It plainly does not matter what Hosea thought he was
talking about. What matters is what the Holy Spirit was talking about. It did
no violence to the text here to see the word, "son" as a figurative reference
to Israel, UNTIL this was fulfilled by the Son of God. Such is the nature of prophecy
that many things are hidden right on the surface and in the plain language of
the prophecy. So it can be seen, and has been seen by many Protestant theologians
that Israel's coming out of Egypt was a typical or partial fulfillment of this
prophecy; they didn't need something called midrash to bring this to their attention.
The fact is that there are expositions in Romans, Galatians, and Hebrews
that instruct us directly in the principles of Biblical interpretation, giving
us examples of the significance of symbols and allegory. But Jacob says:
"It takes the wisdom of the ancients to really understand these things-Let
him that hath understanding count the number of the beast... (Revelation 13:18)-not
the wisdom of the 16th century, but the wisdom of the first century."
And now, Prasch intimates that HE, understands the significance of the number
of the beast - but he's not telling us. And he suggests that unless you study
Midrash, you will never know what he knows, and now he lures you to learn midrash
so that you can finally understand prophecy rightly. CONCLUSION
Last year in our correspondence with Mr. Prasch, we asked him the
question: 1. Can a group of sincere, literate, English speaking people
in isolation from the rest of the world, come to a COMPLETE understanding of ALL
that God deeds to us through the Bible, if all they have in their possession is
a KJV without notes (without Midrash, without Eidersheim, without Josephus)?
Prasch answered: "my answer to your first question is no." I
have friends who express a high regard for Jacob Prasch. I have read other articles
by Mr. Prasch that I recommend to others. Therefore it is difficult and somewhat
painful to make this report. I wish he would just drop the word "Midrash" from
his preaching and teaching vocabulary. The fact is, it only takes a
little leaven to leaven the whole lump, and Jacob's goal of bringing Midrash into
Christendom is the leaven which I must denounce because it smacks of nothing less
than the error of priest-craft, in which he presents himself as the expert that
we need to learn from before we can rightly understand our Bible. His error also
plays well into the Apostasy of Christendom wherein the foundations of our Faith
are being systematically called into question and then destroyed. I
have no evidence that Mr. Prash is conspiratorially working with any segment of
the Hebrew Roots movement, so it could be that he is just an unwitting tool of
those Judaizers and they will not be content with Christ's "one new man" (Eph.2:15),
unless that man is Jewish in culture, tradition and religion. In any
case I think that we had better GET THAT CAMEL'S NOSE OUT OF OUR TENT!
Report by Richard Engstrom tgd@multipro.com http://www.apostasynow.com/tgd/index.html
Editor-- Blessed Quietness Journal:
Friends: What follows is not a nice way to end an article which seems
to answer many questions regarding the Hebrew Roots Movement, but I cannot let
the thing stand just as I received it. Thus......... DISCLAIMER!!!!!
Richard Engstrom is the leading guru, along with Dean Flanders who authored
"The Great Dream", and
both men are in serious error. Why? They, like Rusous Rushdoony, will
not fellowship with other saints because they claim anyone but them is apostate.
They live on some mountain in Tennessee, where they appear to be a recluse
commune. They call for disciples to come to them, then they fight with
the disciples who do. Strange indeed. They have a little
wine making program, and they refuse to take counsel on wine bibbing. I
find it astounding that a couple of men who are raging against apostasy are tipping
the glass and exalting it with the old saw of alcohol in biblical wine. These men have climbed about 75% out of the Slough of Despond
of Charismatic devilment, but they retain tongues speaking, and Flanders will
interpret your dreams as messages from God in the Daniel model. Check
out our Journal page on "The Great Dream" to see how Flanders
got the gift of tongues and seems to teach that this gift comes through temporary
demon possession and frustration in the Church. They told a friend of
mine that they go to a Methodist church sometimes because the dance program is
good, and they go to a Baptist church for some other reason, though they consider
both churches apostate. They send their girls to ballet class, which is
an art form dominated by queers. Frankly, I have seen this kind of mess
a number of times, and almost every time another doctrine is at work-- The devilish
doctrine of "sinless perfection", in which the groupies can never sin again,
so they hit the holy booze and offend everyone around them with impunity. Being
imperfect yet, not having entirely shucked off the old man, I feel just a bit
resentful at these holiness quacks. Is this not another doctrine found at the
commune up yonder mountain? Proverbs 30:13
There is a generation, O how lofty are their eyes! and their eyelids are lifted
up. So, I have decided to leave the above page in place. In
spite of the dirty tricks of the author, I believe the content of the above material
is useful, but please treat it like the Apocrypha as to trust.
I have been informed that the Dream Mountain boys have been getting right in some
areas. I would certainly welcome this, and if I can believe this and hear
it from them, I shall remove this disclaimer. I should be only too pleased
to find these guys getting all the way onto the narrow way.
Editor-- Blessed Quietness Journal P.S. To a friend
who is watching-- Thanks sir. 2 Corinthians 2:11
Lest Satan should get an advantage of us: for we are not ignorant of his
devices.
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