Benefits of the Hebrew Roots Perspective

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As my family and I have grown in our Christian faith and embraced the Hebrew Roots of that faith, I’ve found so many benefits along our journey! It’s put to rest some of the inconsistencies that have bothered me about the Christian faith as well as given me a better understanding of the Scriptures, our Savior, and of God! Here are the main benefits I’ve noticed of this perspective on my faith.

1. It clarifies the continuity between the Old and New Testaments. 

Many regard the Old and New Testaments to be separate books, with separate stories, maybe even with different Gods. Although most Christians will say they believe Bible to be the inspired word of God in its entirety, some even go so far as to consider the Old Testament irrelevant to our faith. I used to embrace this belief and it led to colossal misunderstandings of God, Jesus, salvation, the Bible, and many other concepts.

The truth is that the whole Bible is one story of one God and His people. There is no “God of the Old Testament” as I have heard Him described. God is the same as He was then and we can expect Him to be the same in the future.

When the Bible tells of God’s people in the Old Testament, it also refers to us as Believers because we’re grafted in to the promises of God through our faith in Jesus.

Both Testaments are not only relevant to our faith, they each contain concepts that we must apply to our lives as Believers in Christ. While most of us can see the relevance of the New Testament clearly, some see the Old Testament as difficult to understand, outdated, and harsh.

But without a solid understanding of the Old Testament, we cannot fully understand the New. It was in the Old Testament that the roots were laid – for the Messiah, Israel (both the people and the land), for the church, and for the future.

The complete story can’t be found in the New Testament alone and interpreting the Old Testament in light of the New is backward and will lead to much confusion and misinterpretation. I have very recently found a simple way to understand the strong connection between the two Testaments in the version of the Bible called The Scriptures. It puts in bold the parts of the New Testament that are directly from the Old Testament and there’s a LOT of bold!

2. Jesus’s words are easier to understand. 

While it may be difficult for some Christians to get their heads around (it was for me at first!), Jesus is very, very Jewish. The thought that once blew my mind is that he’ll STILL be Jewish when he returns!

With that in mind, how can we interpret what Jesus says from the mindset of American culture? For example, when Jesus is asked what the most important commandment is, his response includes the words of the Shema, Deuteronomy 6:4-9, which is recited at least twice daily by Orthodox Jews, both today and in Jesus’s time. His audience would have easily recognized his response as the familiar words of the Shema.

Jesus said that all of the rest of the Law and prophets (the Old Testament) hung on these words. With an understanding of the Shema and its prominent place in Jewish life, no one in his audience would have interpreted him as saying that these were now the only two laws that applied, as some believe today. They would have seen, as many do, that this verse shows us that loving God is following His commands – all of them!

3. Paul’s writings no longer seem to contradict one another. 

I’ve always found Paul’s letters, particularly when he writes about the Law, to be confusing. I’m not the only one. Even Peter notes in 2 Peter 3:3 that Paul’s writing is confusing to some. Here are two excerpts from Paul’s writings as an example:

Now that no one is justified by the Law before God is evident…

Galatians 3:11

And

…for it is not the hearers of the Law who are just before God, but the doers of the Law will be justified.

Romans 2:13

And Paul appears to not only have contradicted himself but to have contradicted Jesus as well! Jesus says that he didn’t come to abolish the Law (Matt. 5:17-19) and then Paul says that Jesus abolished the Law (Eph. 2:14-15).

The common Christian interpretation takes the position that the Law has been abolished and interprets these and other verses with that understanding. They hold Jesus’s words up to Paul’s and take the position that Jesus must have meant something else when he contradicted Paul. But when you take the words of Jesus and the rest of the Bible as the authority for interpretation of Paul’s words, a very different result is reached.

Even though his writings confuse many due to the different types of laws he refers to and his differing audiences, Paul believes (as do many Hebrew Roots Christians and Messianic Jews) that, while our adherence to the Law doesn’t save us, it is the code we should adhere to after salvation out of sanctification and growth in righteousness. I’ll say it again because this is the point where the Hebrew Roots Movement tends to lose a lot of Christians – following the Law does NOT save us. But it is the way we should live as God’s redeemed people.

4. God’s Laws can be seen as blessings instead of constraints. 

Biblically, God’s Laws are good but many see them instead as negative and as constraints put on the lives of those before us just to show us what sin is and that we can’t live up to what God desires of us. But that’s not what God says about them. Here are some verses that show us how God views His Laws for us (emphasis mine):

The law of the LORD is perfect, restoring the soul…

Psalm 19:7

How blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked, nor stand in the path of sinners, nor sit in the seat of scoffers! But his delight is in the law of the LORD, and in His law he meditates day and night.

Psalm 1:1-2

Oh that they had such a heart in them, that they would fear Me and keep all My commandments always, that it may be well with them and with their sons forever!

Deuteronomy 5:29

The entire chapter of Psalm 119 has wonderful things to say about God’s Law and so do many, many other places in the Bible! Although they don’t have the power to save us, God’s Laws are the best way to live as His people and they are a blessing to us!

5. God gets the glory. 

Reverence for God, His name, His Word, and His Law are all major themes when Christianity is practiced from a Hebrew Roots perspective.

Many have returned to using the tetragrammaton (יהוה or Yahweh, as it’s most commonly pronounced) to refer to God or even to not saying or writing a name for Him at all. This is done out of reverence as well as out of obedience to the third commandment. While some may see this as impersonal, it comes as a result of faith in and awe and reverent fear of the God of the universe.

As I stated in #1 above, the Hebrew Roots perspective gives equal weight to the Old and New Testaments. The Torah (the Bible’s first five books) and the words of the prophets are extensively referred to in the New Testament. In synagogues, these precious books of the Old Testament are studied and celebrated weekly! It glorifies God to take all of His words as applicable to our lives and our faith.

When His Word says that His Laws are “perfect” and that we should “delight” in them and many other positive things, we don’t glorify Him if we make them out to be negative constraints that God set up to trap us. We can rest in the trust that God gave His Laws because He knows what’s best for us as people belonging to Him.

6. Otherwise confusing cultural customs become clearly relevant. 

Take, for example, when the Holy Spirit was given to the Apostles. What they were celebrating when that happened was Shavuot. This is the time they celebrated God giving His Law to His people. With this background, they would’ve clearly understood the giving of the Holy Spirit as fulfillment of prophecy (Jere. 31:33). They would have seen that those same Laws they celebrated were the very ones being written on their hearts that day.

Celebrating Shavuot as a Christian puts the connection between the Law and the Holy Spirit in perspective. Rather than the Holy Spirit replacing the Law, it instead helps us be able to obey, since those Laws are now within us and have become a part of us.

7. Study of the Bible in its original languages brings clarity that no translation can.

Most Christians who have a Hebrew Roots perspective to their faith are at some level of learning the Hebrew and Greek languages to aid in their Bible studies. The Old Testament, written largely in Hebrew, cannot be fully understood from merely studying it in its translated form. Hebrew doesn’t translate seamlessly to English as there are some Hebrew words that cannot be fully expressed in our language.

I often use the well-known Hebrew word for peace as an example of this. In Hebrew, shalom is the word for peace.  Shalom doesn’t just mean peace though.  Its full Hebrew meaning encompasses completeness, welfare, prosperity, perfection, soundness, safety, health, and more.  Yet when translated into English almost everywhere it appears in the bible, in nearly every English bible translation, it is merely translated as “peace”, leaving the reader to interpret the meaning as simply that.

Learning Hebrew has great benefit to our Christian faith in that it aids our understanding of the Bible. Although there are great English translations of the Bible, none of them compare in accuracy to the original texts.

8. Jesus is celebrated year-round.

Celebrating the Biblical Holy Days, which all point to Jesus in some way, is a great benefit to our faith! Seven times a year (and on the Sabbath), we can look to these Days to remind us of Jesus – who he is, what he’s done for us, and what he will do in the future!

Here’s a summary of the Holy Days and their relevance to Jesus:

The Sabbath/Shabbat: Jesus is our Sabbath rest. Out of mercy, he covered our sin so we can escape the eternal punishment we deserve.

Pesach/Passover: Jesus is our Passover Lamb. His blood is what protects us from God’s just wrath.

Chag HaMatzot/Unleavened Bread: Being without sin, Jesus is the only “unleavened” one fit to take the place of sacrifice for our sin.

HaBikkurim/First Fruits: Jesus is our first fruits offering. Through him, we look forward to the future harvest, his resurrection, and to his eventual rule over the earth!

Shavuot/Pentecost: Jesus was the Word with us here on earth and left so that we could have the Spirit and the “Word” was then written on our hearts.

Yom Teruah/Rosh Hashanah: We look forward to the trumpet blasts that will occur when Jesus returns.

Yom Kippur/Day of Atonement: Because of Jesus, we can appear before God and commune with Him.

Sukkot/Feast of Tabernacles: Jesus came to earth and “tabernacled” with us.

9. Believing Jews and Christians can be one in Jesus.

Jesus didn’t come to earth to start a new religion. He came to be the sacrifice necessary to bridge the gap we created between us and God through sin. He came as the Messiah for Israel and we, as Gentile Christians, are grafted in to the promises God gave to His people Israel.

Christians and Jews weren’t meant to be separate but one body in Jesus. In communities of Hebrew Roots Christians and Messianic Jews, this complete body of Christ can be seen and experienced and it’s amazing to see them come together as one!

Practicing Christianity from the perspective of our Hebrew roots is so rich and has much to give to our faith. Here’s further information if you’re interested in bringing the Hebrew roots of the Christian faith into your home. For further study on the subject, I recommend Jim Parsons’s book, A Year Through the Torah. Tailored for Christians, it’s a Torah study that both explains the beginning of the Bible from a Hebrew Roots/Messianic Jewish perspective, but also points out the relevance to the New Testament and ultimately to Jesus.

hebrewrootsmom

I am a Gentile Believer and mother of five wonderful children, blessed with an amazing husband. I love nature, gardening, and travel. If I ever find spare time, I use it for playing the piano, gardening, ballroom dance, or studying Biblical Hebrew. And I will drop pretty much anything to play cards with someone.
My quest for a genuine relationship with the God of the Bible caused me look deeper into His Word to find out how to live, which is how I arrived here, as a Hebrew Roots mom.

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3 Comments

  1. Rev. Howard Warner, III says:

    Dear Hebrew Roots Mom,
    Your essay was very helpful, especially knowing the meaning of “peace” in the Hebrew language. Why study the Hebrew language when you can get the same information (and easier) from the English translation?

    1. Thank you Reverend. The short answer to your question is that you cannot get the same information about many Hebrew words from an English translation. Studying the Hebrew gives a clearer and deeper meaning than merely substituting an English word for a Hebrew word. Here’s the long answer: https://hebrewrootsmom.com/7-ways-learning-hebrew-benefits-your-christian-faith/

  2. I have had da great deal of struggles this last year with my “faith”. From weak Lutheran roots to full embrace and deep studies of reformed/Calvinism theology, too many red flags have plagued me. Essentially finding theologians (i.e. Dr Leighton Flowers, Mike Winger) that show the errors of Augustinianism (et.al) has helped me move from such errors. But I’ve still struggled. I am starting to see that we have been pulled away from the true base and root of the Judeo/Christian faith by heresies by corrupt “leaders” after the first church. Thank you for your wonderful (and very Biblical!) article here. I still feel lost and am slowly gathering the pieces of what is and what isn’t…not to mention learning to re-read Scripture without the stained and ingrained theology I once held in high regard. But I’m finding my faith loss is in man’s doctrines rather than in God. I thought God gave me up because of my struggles of faith all these years. Scariest moment of my life ever! (And I’m a combat military vet!). Anyway, thank you for your clear and open teachings!

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