Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

From $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Complete Jewish Bible
Complete Jewish Bible
Complete Jewish Bible
Ebook3,438 pages45 hours

Complete Jewish Bible

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

A fresh English version of the Bible by David H. Stern with Updated Text with Introductions to Each Book
You don’t have to be Jewish to LOVE the Complete Jewish Bible!
Experience Yeshua's Jewish family history starting in Genesis!
Engage in the Life of First Century Jewish and Gentile Believers!
Enjoy a fresh version of the Bible that restores its original Jewish Historical and Cultural setting!
Explore the Jewish Roots of the Christian Faith!
Why is this Bible different from all other Bibles? Because it is the only English version fully Jewish in style and presentation. It includes Dr. Stern’s newly updated version of the Tanakh (“Old Testament”) and his highly acclaimed Jewish New Testament.
The Complete Jewish Bible
· follows the Hebrew Bible order of the Tanakh’s books, the order with which Yeshua (Jesus) was familiar
· makes no separation between “Old” and “New” Testaments
· clarifies misunderstandings by recognizing the Jewish historical/cultural background of the text
· offers the original Hebrew names for people, places, and concepts, using easy-to-read English transliterations and pronunciations
· focuses on Messianic prophecy
· gives the traditional weekly and holiday synagogue readings, plus relevant readings from the B’rit Hadashah (New Testament)
· reconnects Christians with their Jewish roots and the Jewish people
· connects Jews with the Jewishness of Messiah Yeshua and Messianic faith
Other features of this Bible: a comprehensive introduction, a pronouncing explanatory glossary, a reverse glossary, and special maps to aid in Bible understanding.
The Complete Jewish Bible shows that the Word of God, from Genesis to Revelation, is a unified Jewish book meant for everyone — Jew and non-Jew alike.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 11, 2024
ISBN9781951833909
Complete Jewish Bible
Author

David H. Stern

David H. Stern was born in Los Angeles in 1935, the great-grandson of two of the city’s first twenty Jews. He earned a PhD in economics at Princeton University and was a professor at UCLA, as well as a mountain-climber, co-author of a book on surfing, and owner of health-food stores. In 1972, he came to believe in Yeshua as the Messiah, after which he received a master of divinity degree from Fuller Theological Seminary and did graduate work at the University of Judaism. He was married in 1976 to Martha Frankel, also a Messianic Jew, and together they served one year on the staff of Jews for Jesus. Dr. Stern taught Fuller Theological Seminary’s first course in Judaism and Christianity, organized Messianic Jewish conferences and leaders’ meetings, and was an officer of the Messianic Jewish Alliance of America. In 1979, the Stern family made aliyah (immigrated to Israel). They now live in Jerusalem and are active in Israel’s Messianic Jewish community. The Sterns have two children and eight grandchildren. Dr. Stern is the author of Messianic Judaism: A Modern Movement with an Ancient Past (formerly Messianic Jewish Manifesto), which outlines the history, theology, destiny, and program of today’s Messianic Jewish movement. He also wrote Restoring the Jewishness of the Gospel: A Message for Christians. It consists of excerpts from the former book selected for Christians to whom the Jewishness of the gospel is an unfamiliar idea. His Jewish New Testament, which has been incorporated into the Complete Jewish Bible, is the basis for its companion volume, the Jewish New Testament Commentary. This book discusses Jewish issues raised in the New Testament: questions Jews have about Yeshua, the New Testament, and Christianity; questions Christians have about Judaism and the Jewish roots of their faith; and questions Messianic Jews have about their own identity and role. Taken together, Dr. Stern’s books have sold well over a million copies, have been translated into dozens of languages, are included in many Bible software packages, and are the best-read books of their kind. In 2016, Messianic Jewish Publishers, in collaboration with Hendrickson Bible Publishers, published the Complete Jewish Study Bible. This first-of-its-kind volume uses Dr. Stern’s Complete Jewish Bible text, along with notes from his Commentary as well as hundreds of additional notes, articles and essays from other theologians and scholars.

Read more from David H. Stern

Related to Complete Jewish Bible

Related ebooks

Religion & Spirituality For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Complete Jewish Bible

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Complete Jewish Bible - David H. Stern

    Front Cover of Complete Jewish BibleHalf Title of Complete Jewish BibleBook Title of Complete Jewish Bible

    The Complete Jewish Bible

    ©1998 and 2016 by David H. Stern

    Library of Congress Control Number: 2016915831

    First printing—January 2017

    2020 (Giant print), 2022 (all other editions)

    The CJB text may be quoted in any form (written, visual, electronic, or audio), up to and inclusive of five hundred (500) verses without the express written permission of the publisher, provided that the verses quoted do not constitute a complete book nor account for twenty-five percent (25%) or more of the total text of the work in which they are quoted. Full attribution must be given on the copyright page as follows:

    Scripture quotations taken from the Complete Jewish Bible,

    Copyright ©1998 and 2016 by David H. Stern.

    Used by permission of Messianic Jewish Publishers, www.messianicjewish.net.

    All rights reserved worldwide.

    Interior typesetting by Yvonne Vermillion, Magic Graphix, Westfork, Arkansas.

    Cover design by Lisa Rubin, graphic design by Yvonne Vermillion, Magic Graphix, Westfork, Arkansas

    The architectural feature on the cover comes from a balcony in the Jubilee Synagogue in Prague, designed by Wilhelm Stiassny and built in 1906. It was named in honor of the 50th anniversary celebration, or the silver jubilee, of the reign of Emperor Franz Josef I of Austria who granted the Jewish population full equal rights in 1867. © by Claudine Van Massenhove/Bigstock.com.

    Grapevine background © by Neirfy/Bigstock.com.

    Published by:

    Messianic Jewish Publishers

    6120 Day Long Lane

    Clarksville, MD 21029

    Distributed by:

    Messianic Jewish Resources International

    Order line: (800) 410-7367

    E-mail: lederer@messianicjewish.net

    Website: www.messianicjewish.net

    Printed in India

    ברוך אתה יהוה אלהינו מלך העולם אשר נותן תורת אמת ובשורת ישועה לעמו ישראל ולכל העמים על-ידי בנו ישוע המשיח אדוננו

    Praised are you, ADONAI our God, King of the universe, who gives the Torah of truth and the good news of salvation to his people Isra’el and to all the peoples through his son Yeshua the Messiah, our Lord.

    Contents

    Books of the Tanakh Listed in Christian Old Testament Order

    Books of the Bible Listed in Alphabetical Order

    INTRODUCTION TO THE COMPLETE JEWISH BIBLE

    I.How the Complete Jewish Bible Came to Be

    II.Translations and Translators

    III.The Bible

    IV.Contents of the Bible

    V.Other Features of the Bible

    VI.Why the Bible Is God’s Word

    VII.Jewish Tanakh versus Christian Old Testament

    VIII.Original-Language Texts Underlying the Complete Jewish Bible

    IX.Poetry in the Complete Jewish Bible

    X.The Name of God in the Complete Jewish Bible

    XI.The Jewishness of the New Testament

    XII.How the Complete Jewish Bible Expresses the B’rit Hadashah’s Jewishness

    XIII.Reasons for Certain B’rit Hadashah Renderings

    XIV.Tanakh Prophecies Fulfilled by Yeshua the Messiah

    XV.Synagogue Usage of the Complete Jewish Bible

    XVI.How to Pronounce the Hebrew Names and Terms

    XVII.Using the Complete Jewish Bible

    XVIII.Acknowledgments

    BOOKS OF THE BIBLE BY SECTION

    I. TORAH (TEACHING, LAW)

    B’resheet (Genesis)

    Sh’mot (Exodus)

    Vayikra (Leviticus)

    B’midbar (Numbers)

    D’varim (Deuteronomy)

    II. NEVI’IM (PROPHETS)

    Nevi’im Rishonim (Early Prophets)

    Y’hoshua (Joshua)

    Shof’tim (Judges)

    Sh’mu’el (Samuel)

    Sh’mu’el Alef (1 Samuel)

    Sh’mu’el Bet (2 Samuel)

    M’lakhim (Kings)

    M’lakhim Alef (1 Kings)

    M’lakhim Bet (2 Kings)

    Nevi’im Acharonim (Later Prophets)

    Yesha‘yahu (Isaiah)

    Yirmeyahu (Jeremiah)

    Yechezk’el (Ezekiel)

    Shneim-‘Asar (The Twelve)

    Hoshea (Hosea)

    Yo’el (Joel)

    ‘Amos (Amos)

    ‘Ovadyah (Obadiah)

    Yonah (Jonah)

    Mikhah (Micah)

    Nachum (Nahum)

    Havakuk (Habakkuk)

    Tz’fanyah (Zephaniah)

    Hagai (Haggai)

    Z’kharyah (Zechariah)

    Mal’akhi (Malachi)

    III. K’TUVIM (WRITINGS)

    Tehillim (Psalms)

    Mishlei (Proverbs)

    Iyov (Job)

    The Five Megillot (Scrolls)

    Shir-HaShirim (Song of Songs)

    Rut (Ruth)

    Eikhah (Lamentations)

    Kohelet (Ecclesiastes)

    Ester (Esther)

    Dani’el (Daniel)

    ‘Ezra-Nechemyah (Ezra-Nehemiah)

    Ezra (Ezra)

    Nechemyah (Nehemiah)

    Divrei-HaYamim (Chronicles)

    Divrei-HaYamim Alef (1 Chronicles)

    Divrei-HaYamim Bet (2 Chronicles)

    IV. THE GOOD NEWS OF YESHUA THE MESSIAH, AS REPORTED BY

    Mattityahu (Matthew)

    Mark

    Luke

    Yochanan (John)

    V. THE ACTS OF THE EMISSARIES OF YESHUA THE MESSIAH

    VI. LETTERS/EPISTLES

    Sha’ul’s (Paul’s) Letters to Communities

    Romans

    1 Corinthians

    2 Corinthians

    Galatians

    Ephesians

    Philippians

    Colossians

    1 Thessalonians

    2 Thessalonians

    Sha’ul’s (Paul’s) Pastoral Letters (to Individuals)

    1 Timothy

    2 Timothy

    Titus

    Philemon

    Messianic Letters

    Messianic Jews (Hebrews)

    Ya‘akov (James)

    1 Kefa (1 Peter)

    2 Kefa (2 Peter)

    1 Yochanan (1 John)

    2 Yochanan (2 John)

    3 Yochanan (3 John)

    Y’hudah (Jude)

    VII. THE REVELATION OF YESHUA THE MESSIAH TO YOCHANAN (JOHN)

    APPENDIX

    Glossary of Hebrew Words (with Pronunciation) into English

    Glossary of English Words into Hebrew (with Pronunciation)

    Index of Tanakh Passages Cited in the B’rit Hadashah

    Scripture Readings for Shabbat and Festivals, Feasts & Fasts

    Shabbat Scripture Readings (Parashot)

    Festivals, Feasts & Fasts Scripture Readings

    About the Translator

    Maps

    BOOKS OF THE TANAKH

    LISTED IN CHRISTIAN OLD TESTAMENT ORDER

    PENTATEUCH

    Genesis

    Exodus

    Leviticus

    Numbers

    Deuteronomy

    HISTORICAL BOOKS

    Joshua

    Judges

    Ruth

    1 Samuel

    2 Samuel

    1 Kings

    2 Kings

    1 Chronicles

    2 Chronicles

    Ezra

    Nehemiah

    Esther

    WRITINGS

    Job

    Psalms

    Proverbs

    Ecclesiastes

    Song of Songs

    PROPHETS

    Isaiah

    Jeremiah

    Lamentations

    Ezekiel

    Daniel

    Hosea

    Joel

    Amos

    Obadiah

    Jonah

    Micah

    Nahum

    Habakkuk

    Zephaniah

    Haggai

    Zechariah

    Malachi

    BOOKS OF THE BIBLE

    LISTED IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER

    (Including both the Jewish and the Christian names for the books)

    Acts of the Emissaries

    ‘Amos/Amos

    B’midbar/Numbers

    B’resheet/Genesis

    1 Chronicles/Divrei-HaYamim Alef

    2 Chronicles/Divrei-HaYamim Bet

    Colossians

    1 Corinthians

    2 Corinthians

    Dani’el/Daniel

    Deuteronomy/D’varim

    Divrei-HaYamim Alef/1 Chronicles

    Divrei-HaYamim Bet/2 Chronicles

    D’varim/Deuteronomy

    Ecclesiastes/Kohelet

    Eikhah/Lamentations

    Ephesians

    Ester/Esther

    Exodus/Sh’mot

    Ezekiel/Yechezk’el

    ‘Ezra/Ezra

    Galatians

    Genesis/B’resheet

    Habakkuk/Havakuk

    Hagai/Haggai

    Havakuk/Habakkuk

    Hebrews/Messianic Jews

    Hoshea/Hosea

    Isaiah/Yesha‘yahu

    Iyov/Job

    James/Ya‘akov

    Jeremiah/Yirmeyahu

    Job/Iyov

    Joel/Yo’el

    John/Yochanan

    1 John/1 Yochanan

    2 John/2 Yochanan

    3 John/3 Yochanan

    Jonah/Yonah

    Joshua/Y’hoshua

    Jude/Y’hudah

    Judges/Shof’tim

    1 Kefa/1 Peter

    2 Kefa/2 Peter

    1 Kings/M’lakhim Alef

    2 Kings/M’lakhim Bet

    Kohelet/Ecclesiastes

    Lamentations/Eikhah

    Leviticus/Vayikra

    Luke

    Mal’akhi/Malachi

    Mark

    Mattityahu/Matthew

    Messianic Jews/Hebrews

    Mikhah/Micah

    Mishlei/Proverbs

    M’lakhim Alef/1 Kings

    M’lakhim Bet/2 Kings

    Nachum/Nahum

    Nechemyah/Nehemiah

    Numbers/B’midbar

    ‘Ovadyah/Obadiah

    1 Peter/1 Kefa

    2 Peter/2 Kefa

    Philemon

    Philippians

    Proverbs/Mishlei

    Psalms/Tehillim

    Revelation

    Romans

    Rut/Ruth

    1 Samuel/Sh’mu’el Alef

    2 Samuel/Sh’mu’el Bet

    Shir-HaShirim/Song of Songs

    Sh’mot/Exodus

    Sh’mu’el Alef/1 Samuel

    Sh’mu’el Bet/2 Samuel

    Shneim-‘Asar/The Twelve

    Shof’tim/Judges

    Song of Songs/Shir-HaShirim

    Tehillim/Psalms

    1 Thessalonians

    2 Thessalonians

    1 Timothy

    2 Timothy

    Titus

    The Twelve/Shneim-‘Asar

    Tz’fanyah/Zephaniah

    Vayikra/Leviticus

    Ya‘akov/James

    Yechezk’el/Ezekiel

    Yesha‘yahu/Isaiah

    Y’hoshua/Joshua

    Y’hudah/Jude

    Yirmeyahu/Jeremiah

    Yochanan/John

    1 Yochanan/1 John

    2 Yochanan/2 John

    3 Yochanan/3 John

    Yo’el/Joel

    Yonah/Jonah

    Zechariah/Z’kharyah

    Zephaniah/Tz’fanyah

    Z’kharyah/Zechariah

    INTRODUCTION TO THE

    Complete Jewish Bible

    Why is this Bible different from all other Bibles? Because it is the only English version of the Bible fully Jewish in style and presentation that includes both the Tanakh (Old Testament) and the B’rit Hadashah (New Covenant, New Testament). Even its title, the Complete Jewish Bible, challenges both Jews and Christians to see that the whole Bible is Jewish, the B’rit Hadashah as well as the Tanakh. Jews are challenged by the implication that without it the Tanakh is an incomplete Bible. Christians are challenged by the fact that they are joined to the Jewish people through faith in the Jewish Messiah, Yeshua (Jesus)—so that because Christianity can be rightly understood only from a Jewish perspective, anti-Semitism is condemned absolutely and forever. In short, the Complete Jewish Bible restores the Jewish unity of the Bible. Also, for the first time the information needed for the synagogue readings from the Torah and the Prophets is completely integrated with similar use of the B’rit Hadashah.

    I. HOW THE COMPLETE JEWISH BIBLE CAME TO BE

    A bit of personal history will give the reader some insight as to why the Complete Jewish Bible exists. Bible introductions are usually more formal, eschewing the use of the first-person singular pronoun, because the seriousness of the Bible seems to call for it—a formal introduction reinforces the authority of the Bible itself. After all, the Bible is God’s word to humanity, the only completely reliable verbal communication God has given us. It is worthy of acceptance, belief, trust; it is his handbook for faith and practice (for a brief explanation and defense of these assertions, see Section VI below). Since this is so, the writer of an introduction to the Bible necessarily shoulders a heavy responsibility, one in which informality and focus on oneself seem out of place.

    Nevertheless, there is another side: precisely because the Bible deals with serious topics such as sin, judgment, God’s will, repentance, and forgiveness, as well as the role in life and history of Yeshua the Messiah (whom Christians call Jesus Christ), readers of translations tend to forget that there is a specific human input that does not date from Bible times and that both fosters and impedes their understanding of Scripture, namely, the translator. My choice of style for this Introduction, especially in Sections I and II, stems from my desire to have the translator’s role in this Bible version and others better understood. Further on, I will deal with the content of the Bible itself (Sections III–VIII), the specific features of the Complete Jewish Bible (Sections IX–XIV), and how to make the best use of this version (Sections XV–XVII). But here, I am presenting the translator’s story.

    I am Jewish, was raised in the Jewish religion by Jewish parents, and did not come to faith in the Jewish Messiah, Yeshua, until I was thirty-seven years old. As a Messianic Jew (a Jew who honors Yeshua as the Messiah), I saw that the greatest schism in the world is the separation between the church and the Jewish people; and I experienced it as God’s will for my life that I do what I could to resolve this—it would be my contribution to tikkun-ha‘olam (repairing the world). Although I had a doctorate in economics, I returned to school to learn more about both Christianity and Judaism: Fuller Theological Seminary for the Christian elements, and the University of Judaism for the Jewish.

    Thus equipped, I set out in 1977 to write a Messianic Jewish commentary on the New Testament; I wanted to produce a single book that would deal with all the Jewish issues I could think of in connection with the New Testament: questions Jews have about Yeshua, the New Testament, and Christianity; questions Christians have about Judaism and the Jewish roots of their own faith; and questions we Messianic Jews have about our own identity and role in the light of two thousand years of separation and conflict between the church and the Jews. But I quickly discovered that much of what I was writing consisted of arguments with the translator of the English version I was using; they took the form, "Our English version says such-and-such, but what it really means is so-and-so." The idea came to me to attempt my own translation of the New Testament from the original ancient Greek; then, obviously, I would have a version I agreed with, so I could focus exclusively on the subject matter. I produced a sample and was pleased with it. Thus was born the Jewish New Testament (JNT), which was published in 1989.

    I spent the next three years finishing up the Jewish New Testament Commentary. Meanwhile, the JNT had been well received by Messianic Jews and by Christians open to experiencing the Jewishness of their faith. Bible translation may not be known as a glamorous profession, but I have fans. My fans—who said that they appreciated my reintroduction of Jewishness into the New Testament and that they enjoyed my informal yet respectful style of writing—kept asking me, When are you going to do the Old Testament? They wanted to have a single book containing the entire Bible that they could bring to their congregational meetings, instead of having to carry the Jewish New Testament plus a second book containing the Tanakh.

    I put them off for three more years but finally bowed to the inevitable and got to work. My delay was due to lack of incentive. In translating the Jewish New Testament, I had a strong and directed desire to show everyone, Jews and Christians alike, that the New Testament is a thoroughly Jewish book. But with the Old Testament I had no such motivation—everyone knows it’s Jewish, so what’s to prove? Moreover, at the age of sixty I didn’t care to spend years and years and more years doing a translation from the original Hebrew. Even though I had been living in Isra’el and speaking Hebrew since 1979, I knew from observing my children that my level of competence in the language was approximately that of a native Israeli fifth-grader. I certainly had no special expertise in biblical Hebrew that would justify my trying to translate the Tanakh.

    So I set myself a simpler task. Initially my thought was to acquire the rights to some modern translation of the Tanakh that would be stylistically compatible with my own English style in the JNT. I couldn’t imagine that the owners of any copyrighted Jewish-sponsored translation would permit me to combine it with the New Testament in a single volume having my projected title, so I looked for suitable candidates among the Christian versions. My first choice was rejected by the copyright holders, but my second choice was accepted. However, just as I was ready to move ahead, I realized that if this was to be the Complete Jewish Bible, I couldn’t use any Christian Old Testament, because Christians modify the Masoretic text (the Hebrew text of the Tanakh accepted by Judaism) with information gleaned from the Septuagint and other early versions (see Section VIII). Elation was replaced by gloom. Suddenly it occurred to me that the old Jewish Publication Society (JPS) version of the Tanakh, perhaps the best-known and most used Jewish translation in the English-speaking world, had just gone into the public domain—it had been published in 1917, and copyrights run seventy-five years. But although it had been published in 1917, for various sociological reasons, it sounded as if it had been written in 1617! It was full of King James Bible English and was altogether incompatible with the modern English I had used in the JNT.

    I tried having this old JPS edition scanned into a computer, with the object of modernizing its English by means of a few global-search-and-replace commands. I wanted to be able to press two buttons and have every thou turn into a you and doeth into do, Abraham into Avraham and Isaac into Yitz’chak. It proved to be not that simple. Not only the words but the sentence structures were archaic. The more I fiddled with the JPS text, the less satisfied I was. It was like restoring an old car with lots of dents. You fix the first three, and the fourth, fifth, and sixth stand out. Repair them and numbers 7, 8, 9, and 10 beg for attention. Eventually you repair all the big dents, and you have a car with thousands of little dents, so it still doesn’t look right.

    So I decided to paraphrase the entire JPS Tanakh into modern English, typing in the whole text by hand, as I decided how to express each word, each phrase, each verse. Though a huge project, it would be much less demanding than a translation. And that is how much of this Tanakh came into existence.

    However, there were many places where I questioned the JPS version’s renderings. In such cases, I translated the Hebrew of the Masoretic text myself. I also made use of other English versions to assist me in expressing certain verses in modern English. All Bible translators do this—the people who put together the King James Version did it too, acknowledging their debt to those who had gone before them in their famous subtitle and with the former translations diligently compared and revised. So the Tanakh you have in this book is something between a translation and a paraphrase; since it is partly one and partly the other, I refuse to define it as either and instead call it simply a version. On the other hand, the books of the New Covenant are my translation from the original Greek.

    II. TRANSLATIONS AND TRANSLATORS

    Is There Such a Thing as a Best Translation of the Bible? While on the subject of the translation-and/or-paraphrasing process, I want to make some general remarks about translations. First, it is a common belief that there is such a thing as a best translation of a text from one language to another. I question that. Languages have different words, different syntaxes, different sentence structures, different semantics, different cultures out of which they arise and evolve, and many other differences; so that translation cannot be a simple, automated process. Moreover, readers differ. Some prefer a simple style with a modest vocabulary, while others respond to a more elegant or complex style with a larger vocabulary. Even the concept of accuracy is reader-dependent—what scholars might consider an accurate translation might fail to accurately communicate to less informed readers. If translators fail to consider who their readers are, aren’t the translators responsible for the lack of communication? Clearly some translations are, by all reasonable standards, worse, while others are better. But because readers differ, no one version can be best for all.

    Translations and Their Purposes. Therefore, one has to ask, What is the purpose of a given translation, and does it accomplish its purpose well? The King James Version is unmatched in the beauty of its language; moreover, English would not be what it is without it. But today not everyone can get the sense of the text from its archaic expressions and—with advances in historical, archeological, and linguistic studies—some scholars believe that a number of its renderings are wrong. The newer JPS translation of the Tanakh, from 1985, is particularly useful for noting phrases where the meaning of the original Hebrew is unclear; whereas in my version I have not provided that information. The Today’s English Version (Good News Bible) produced by the United Bible Societies makes use of a limited vocabulary so that those for whom English is a second language can understand it. The New English Bible has echoes of the great writers—such as Shakespeare or Milton—which makes it ideal for public reading in Anglican churches. Everett Fox’s recent translation of the Torah is unique in giving a feel for Hebrew style and thought-forms, as well as the culture of Bible times. The Living Bible, originally prepared by Ken Taylor for his teenage children, conveys—at least to young Americans—an unmatched energy and presence. No one version could possibly serve all these purposes at once. The beauty of God’s word is that it can be translated in various ways that serve these purposes and others, without obscuring the Bible’s own purpose—which is to show people the truth about God, themselves, relationships, and the meaning of life, and to call forth the appropriate and necessary responses.

    Purposes of This Version of the Bible. Therefore, I owe it to my readers to state the purposes of the Complete Jewish Bible (CJB).

    1.My first purpose is, as I said, to restore the unified Jewishness of the Bible, and, particularly, to show that the books of the New Covenant are Jewish through and through.

    2.The second aim of the Complete Jewish Bible is to express the word of God—Tanakh and B’rit Hadashah together—in enjoyable modern English. I want the Bible to be accessible and easy to read, flowing easily from the page into the mind and heart, unimpeded as much as possible by the differences between the environment of the Bible and that of the present.

    3.My third purpose is to make the CJB fully usable in a Messianic synagogue, where the B’rit Hadashah would be read in the service along with the Torah and the Prophets. (The CJB can be used to follow the readings in a non-Messianic synagogue as well.)

    4.And finally, I am supplying at last what my fans have been asking me for—a single volume containing my version of the entire Bible.

    With the above as background, there are three philosophical points raised in translation work that need to be addressed: (1) formal versus dynamic equivalence (literal translations versus paraphrases), (2) the degree to which a translator’s interpretation of a text’s meaning should be reflected in his translation, and (3) the pluses and minuses of a version produced by a single individual versus one produced by a translation team.

    Literal Translations versus Paraphrases. There is a scale on which translations can be measured. At one end of the scale are literal translations, which reproduce in the receptor language (English) the grammatical forms of the source language (Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek); translators call these formally equivalent translations. The King James Version, the Revised Standard Version, the New American Standard Version, and the 1917 Jewish Publication Society version of the Hebrew Bible are examples; an interlinear version (or pony), which renders the original-language text word by word, is the ultimate literal translation. At the other end of the scale are dynamically equivalent translations, which aim at reproducing in the receptor language not the grammatical forms of the source language but the meanings that the original readers would have understood. Popularly, these are sometimes called paraphrases, although that term ought to be reserved for documents in which the source and receptor languages are the same (for example, a paraphrase of the Gettysburg Address might begin, Eighty-seven years ago the founders of our nation …). The Today’s English Version (Good News Bible) and the New Jerusalem Bible (Roman Catholic) are examples of dynamically equivalent translations. The New English Bible, the New International Version, and the modern JPS edition fall somewhere in between.

    On this scale, the Complete Jewish Bible tends toward the dynamically equivalent end of the scale. And at certain points, especially related to Jewish issues, the New Covenant portion becomes militantly so. For example, the Greek phrase upo nomon (literally, under law) is usually rendered under the law. But because this phrase has become a buzzword in anti-Torah Christian theology, the Jewish New Testament and now the Complete Jewish Bible spell out the meaning of these two Greek words in thirteen English words: "in subjection to the system that results from perverting the Torah into legalism" (for more on this topic, see Section XIII below).

    The Translator and His Interpretations. This example raises the question of whether the translator should inject his opinions into his translation. I cautiously answer in the affirmative, on the ground that it inevitably happens anyhow; so that the translator who supposes he maintains neutrality, merely channeling ideas from the source language to the receptor language without influencing the result, deludes both himself and his readers. For necessarily every decision as to how to render a word or phrase from another language into English expresses the translator’s opinion. A translator ideologically committed to not intruding his opinions does so in spite of himself, but without taking responsibility for it.

    Therefore, I believe translators should decide what a word or phrase means—in their opinion—and then convey that meaning as clearly as possible. For example, in the case of upo nomon (discussed above and in Section XIII), precisely because wrong meanings have been conveyed in the past, I consider it my responsibility to convey what I believe to be the one and only correct meaning in as unmistakable a way as possible. Even when an expression in the original language seems vague, capable of more than one interpretation, I don’t think translators should transfer the ambiguity into English. Rather, they should decide on one of the possible interpretations and render that one well. In editions that supply alternative readings, ambiguities can be addressed in a marginal note. This edition does a little of that, but very little; that is not one of its major purposes. A commentary is the right place to deal with such matters fully, and that is one of my purposes in the Jewish New Testament Commentary.

    On the other side of the picture, this approach lends itself to abuse. The fact that the translators’ opinions will necessarily be reflected in their translation does not mean that they should exploit their role, attempting with a partisan rendering to sway their readers toward a partisan position.

    Since this is my philosophy and my working rule, I caution readers who want to check whether a word or phrase means what the CJB says it means to look at other versions, to use concordances and other Bible helps, and to go back to the Hebrew/Aramaic and Greek originals. To expect that the CJB will render perfectly, and with all the necessary nuances for every reader, the sense of every word and phrase in the Bible is to ask for more than it or any translation can do.

    Lone Translator versus Translation Team. A number of people have asked whether it would not have been better to have had a translation team produce the Jewish New Testament, and of course the same question can be raised about the CJB’s Tanakh. My answer is framed in terms of available resources, both human and financial. Certainly the best-known Bible translations have been a team product, including the King James Version, the Revised Standard Version, the New International Version, both JPS versions, and others. Traditionally, even the first translation of the Tanakh into Greek, the Septuagint, was produced by a team of seventy (hence the name, which means seventy) in the third century B.C.E.¹ A team allows for peer review, discussion of problematical texts, and style control; while a single translator may come up with a more unified product (provided he can remember how he translated similar passages). Frankly, I can admit that a team might have done a better job, but I have done the best I can. I hope readers will not be disappointed (see Section VIII for more about the original-language texts used for the CJB).

    III. THE BIBLE

    The Central Message of the Bible. In telling about God, his people Isra’el, and his Messiah Yeshua, the Bible’s constant theme is that human beings need to be saved and that God provides salvation. The purpose of life and the meaning of history is that God will deliver humanity from the misery of sin and restore the conditions that enable individuals and peoples to relate rightly with him. Morality and happiness are inseparably linked with salvation.

    The Tanakh. For according to the Tanakh,² God created human beings in his image to be in intimate, loving, and obedient fellowship with him (Gen. 1:26–2:25). But humanity rebelled—people chose their own way instead of God’s (Gen. 3:1–19)—and still do (1 Kings) 8:46; Eccl. 7:20; Rom. 3:23). The name for such rebellion is sin, and the penalty for sin is death (Gen. 2:17; 5:5; Rom. 6:23)—not only cessation of physical life but everlasting separation from God (Gen. 3:22–24; Isa. 59:1–2). However, God, who is merciful as well as just, wills to save human beings from the eternal death they have earned and deserve. To this end God chose one person, Avraham (Abraham), and through him brought forth a people, the Jews, commissioning them to be a blessing and a light to the nations (Gen. 12:1–3; Isa. 49:6). Through Moshe (Moses) he gave them a Torah (literally, teaching or instruction, though usually translated law), making known his standards for righteousness. Through judges, kings, and prophets he encouraged them, disciplined them, and promised that final salvation would come to them and the other peoples through an anointed one (Hebrew mashiach, which has come over into English as messiah; the Greek word for mashiach is christos, which evolved into the English word Christ).

    The B’rit Hadashah and Yeshua. Continuing this chronicle, the books of the New Covenant proclaim that the Messiah of Isra’el prophesied in the Tanakh is Yeshua: a real, historical person who, like others, was born, lived, and died. Unlike others, however, he had no human father but was given birth by a virgin named Miryam (Mary). Also unlike others, he did not die simply because his life ended or because of his own sin (he had committed none), but in order to redeem us from our sins. Finally, again unlike others, he was resurrected from the dead, is alive now at the right hand of God (Ps. 110:1; Acts 7:56; and throughout Hebrews [Messianic Jews]), and will come a second time to rule as King of Isra’el and bring peace to the world. In explaining why he alone was qualified to be the final sacrifice for sins, the B’rit Hadashah calls him both Son of Man and Son of God. The first term, taken from the Tanakh (Dan. 7:13), means that he is fully and ideally human, sinless, a lamb without blemish (Exod. 12:5; Lev. 1–6; 1 Pet. 1:19). Since he did not owe his life for his own sins, he could be God’s lamb … taking away the sin of the world (John 1:29, 36). The second term, hinted at in the Tanakh (Isa. 9:5–6[6–7]; Zech. 12:10; Ps. 2:7; Prov. 30:4), means not only that God’s Holy Spirit (the Ruach HaKodesh) supernaturally caused Miryam to become pregnant (Matt. 1:18–23), but also that in him, bodily, lives the fullness of all that God is (Col. 2:9), so that he is uniquely able to express God’s love to humanity (John 3:16).

    The Messianic Community. The B’rit Hadashah also describes formative events among the early Jewish and Gentile followers of Yeshua and explains how this new Messianic Community or church is related to the Jewish people. Unlike much Christian theology, the B’rit Hadashah does not say that the Messianic Community replaces the Jews as God’s people. Nor does it say that the Messianic Community stands alongside the Jews as a second eternal people of God with a separate destiny and separate promises. Rather, the relationship is more complex: Gentiles are grafted as wild olive branches into a Jewish cultivated olive tree, some of whose branches fell off but will one day be grafted back into their own olive tree, so that in the end, all Isra’el will be saved (Rom. 11:16–26). Thus the Jews are not, as many Christians think and as many Jews fear, annihilated as a people by being absorbed into the church. On the contrary, as Yirmeyahu (Jeremiah) states—in the same passage in which he announces that God will make a New Covenant with the house of Isra’el and the house of Y’hudah—the Jews remain God’s people forever, for as long as the sun, moon, and stars give light to the earth (Jer. 31:30–36[31–37]). But the Jews will become a people who honor the Messiah for whom they have hoped and waited so long: Yeshua. It is on this basis that unity will be restored between the Messianic Community and the Jewish people and the great schism finally healed.

    Breadth of Vision. The Bible’s concept of salvation is both individual and corporate, so that the Tanakh and B’rit Hadashah speak to the full range of human activity—family life, class struggle, social concerns, commerce, agriculture, the environment, national identity, government, justice, repentance, forgiveness, interpersonal relationships, personal identity, gender issues, worship, prayer, physical health, emotional well-being, the inner life of the spirit, death, the after-life, and final judgment. In all of these areas the Bible informs us that right response to God’s initiatives will bring salvation to every part of our lives—individually, socially, communally, nationally and universally.

    Covenants and Testaments, Old and New. Christians call the Tanakh the Old Testament and the B’rit Hadashah the New Testament. But the English word testament reflects a tension between the Hebrew language of the Tanakh and the Greek of the B’rit Hadashah. The Hebrew word b’rit means covenant, contract. The Greek word for covenant or b’rit is diathêkê. But diathêkê can also mean testament in the sense of will (Heb. 9:16–17; the Greek text plays on the double meaning). The Hebrew words b’rit hadashah can be translated only as new covenant, but the equivalent Greek words can also be translated new testament—and usually are. So although Jeremiah foretold a new foundational contract between God and the Jewish people, not a will—a covenant, not a testament—the term New Testament has become standard terminology, which obscures the meaning of the original Hebrew new covenant. For this reason, in this Introduction, I generally write about the Tanakh instead of the Old Testament and the B’rit Hadashah or books of the New Covenant instead of the New Testament.

    Moreover, a new covenant implies an old one; in this case, the Mosaic Covenant made by God with the Jewish people at Mount Sinai (Exod. 19–24). The B’rit Hadashah makes this explicit in Hebrews 8:6–13, in which context old does not imply bad but merely earlier. Since the books constituting the Tanakh, in which the Mosaic Covenant is pivotal, date from between 1500 and 300 B.C.E., Christians call it the Old Testament, distinguishing it from the first-century C.E. writings that constitute the New Testament.

    Two Testaments, One Bible. Nevertheless, the two parts of the Bible, the Tanakh and the B’rit Hadashah, form one Bible. These two parts deal with parallel material in complementary ways. History, having commenced with the creation of heaven and earth and the sinless paradise of ‘Eden in the first two chapters of the Tanakh, ends with the sinless paradise of a new heaven and a new earth (Isa. 65:17; Rev. 21:1) in the last two chapters of the B’rit Hadashah. The B’rit Hadashah—continuing the salvation history set forth in the Tanakh on the basis of covenants made with Noach (Noah), Avraham (Abraham), Moshe (Moses), and David—presents itself as encompassing the new covenant that God promised in the Tanakh to make with the house of Isra’el and the house of Y’hudah [Judah] (Jer. 31:30–33[31–34]) and presents Yeshua as consummating the systems of kings, prophets, cohanim (priests), and sacrifices described therein, as well as being himself the sum and substance of the Torah. Thus the New Testament apart from the Old is heretical, and the Old Testament apart from the New is incomplete—two testaments, one Bible.

    The Complete Jewish Bible Presents the Bible’s Unity. The Complete Jewish Bible graphically presents this unity by eliminating all separation between the Tanakh and the B’rit Hadashah. Most Christian translations insert a special title page to divide the Old Testament from the New and even number the pages separately, so that the book of Mattityahu (Matthew) starts on the New Testament’s own page 1. The Complete Jewish Bible divides the entire Bible into seven major sections: the Torah, the Prophets, the Writings, the Gospels, the Acts of the Emissaries (Apostles), the Letters, and the book of Revelation. Pagination is continuous. There is no need to collect the first three-quarters of the Bible into the Old Testament and the last quarter into the New. Rather, the Bible is presented as a seamless whole, a unified word of God, a complete Jewish Bible for all humanity.

    IV. CONTENTS OF THE BIBLE

    Of the seven sections of the Bible, the Tanakh consists of the first three and the B’rit Hadashah the remaining four.

    The Torah. The first five books of the Bible constitute the Pentateuch, the Five Books of Moshe (Moses), traditionally attributed to Moshe himself; some scholars believe that later writers modified what Moshe wrote or even wrote the books themselves. B’resheet (Genesis) contains the Creation narratives, the story of the Flood, and the prehistoric dispersion of the nations. With Genesis 12 commences the story of the Jewish People, first with the patriarchs Avraham (Abraham), Yitz’chak (Isaac), and Ya‘akov (Jacob), and finally with the story of Yosef (Joseph) in Egypt. Sh’mot (Exodus) tells of Moshe rescuing the Jewish people from slavery, of the ten plagues, of the exodus from Egypt through the Yam Suf (Red Sea) into the Sinai Desert, and of God, appearing on Mount Sinai, giving the Ten Words (the Ten Commandments) and other regulations. There followed God’s instructions to Moshe as to how the tabernacle was to be constructed. This is interrupted by the apostasy of the people through making the golden calf. Afterwards, the tabernacle is constructed and dedicated, and the system of cohanim (priests) is set up. Vayikra (Leviticus) gives instructions concerning the sacrificial system and other aspects of life. B’midbar (Numbers) describes the people’s journeys through the desert for forty years, together with their rebellious ways, as God molds a people for himself. In D’varim (Deuteronomy), Moshe conveys additional laws in the context of reviewing the previous forty years of history. He appoints Y’hoshua (Joshua) his successor and concludes with a cautionary poem and blessings for the twelve tribes. The Torah ends with the death of Moshe at some point in the fifteenth to thirteenth centuries B.C.E. (scholars disagree over the dating).

    The Prophets. The Prophets are generally divided into the Early Prophets (Nevi’im Rishonim) and the Later Prophets (Nevi’im Acharonim). The first group consists of the four books of Y’hoshua (Joshua), Shof’tim (Judges), Sh’mu’el Alef and Bet (1 and 2 Samuel) and M’lakhim Alef and Bet (1 and 2 Kings). The book of Y’hoshua tells of the people of Isra’el under Y’hoshua as they enter the Land of Isra’el, conquer it, and divide it among the twelve tribes. Shof’tim tells of the next several centuries under various judges, such as Gid‘on (Gideon) and Shimshon (Samson). The last of these judges, Sh’mu’el (Samuel), has his name attached to 1–2 Samuel, which describes the rulership of the first two kings, Sha’ul (Saul) and David. Then 1–2 Kings recount the remaining history of the kingship, starting shortly after 1000 B.C.E. with Shlomo (Solomon); continuing with the dividing up of the territory he ruled into the Northern Kingdom, Isra’el, and the Southern Kingdom, Y’hudah (Judah).It then proceeds with the stories of the prophets Eliyahu (Elijah) and Elisha and a series of kings, to the destruction by Ashur (Assyria) of the Northern Kingdom in 732 B.C.E., and on to the Babylonian conquest of Y’hudah in 586 B.C.E.

    The Later Prophets also consists of four books: a book by each of the three major prophets, Yesha‘yahu (Isaiah), Yirmeyahu (Jeremiah), and Yechezk’el (Ezekiel); and a book containing the writings of the Shneim-‘Asar (the Twelve), known also as the minor prophets. These books contain warnings to the people of Isra’el and ethical advice. Often through these prophets God pleads with Isra’el to remain faithful to him, to turn away from false gods and wrong aims. Through them God often promises rewards for obedience and punishments for disobedience. How God’s love is combined with his holiness is constantly displayed. While sometimes the Prophets make predictions, they are less fore-tellers than forth-tellers, boldly announcing God’s word to people not always willing to hear it.

    The Writings. The Writings include a variety of different forms. Tehillim (Psalms) consists of 150 poems or songs expressing the deepest spiritual yearnings and truths. Mishlei (Proverbs) falls in the category of wisdom literature, in which wisdom is encapsulated in pithy sayings, as does Kohelet (Ecclesiastes). The book of Iyov (Job) addresses the question of why bad things happen to good people; its poetry is unsurpassed in any language. Its Hebrew is the most difficult in the Tanakh, because it contains a great many words that appear nowhere else. The five Megillot (Scrolls) are short books; each "whole megillah" is read on a particular holiday in the Jewish year—Shir-HaShirim (Song of Songs, called the Song of Solomon in Christian Bibles) at Pesach (Passover); Rut (Ruth) at Shavu‘ot, because it’s a harvest festival; Eikhah (Lamentations) on the Ninth of Av, which is a day of fasting in memory of the destruction of both Temples; Kohelet (Ecclesiastes) at Sh’mini ‘Atzeret, the festival anticipating winter, which immediately follows Sukkot; and Ester (Esther) at Purim, since the book tells the story of that holiday. Dani’el and ‘Ezra-Nechemyah (Ezra-Nehemiah) evoke life in and after the Babylonian exile, while Divrei HaYamim Alef and Bet (1 and 2 Chronicles) review from a priestly viewpoint the history detailed in Sh’mu’el (Samuel) and M’lakhim (Kings). The beginning of ‘Ezra and the end of 2 Chronicles show that ‘Ezra is the sequel to Chronicles.

    The Gospels. The twenty-seven books of the B’rit Hadashah were written in the first century of the Common Era by at least eight authors.³ Of these, the first four present four distinct views of Yeshua’s life and purpose in salvation history (God’s involvement in human history for the purpose of saving humanity). The first and fourth Gospels are understood to have been written by two of Yeshua’s twelve talmidim (disciples), Mattityahu (Matthew) and Yochanan (John). The second is attributed to Mark, who accompanied another of Yeshua’s talmidim, Kefa (Peter). The author of the third was Luke, an associate of Sha’ul (Saul/Paul).

    The old English word gospel means good news. Therefore, in a significant sense there are not four gospels but one—namely, the good news of who Yeshua is and what he has done. But each of the four Gospels presents this good news in its own way, just as four honest witnesses to an event will each have his own version of what happened. Broadly speaking, one may say that Mattityahu has a Jewish readership in mind, while it seems that Luke is writing for Gentiles.⁴ Mark’s version is fast-paced and filled with human-interest details. Yochanan’s Gospel never loses sight of Yeshua’s heavenly origin, portraying him clearly as not only the Son of Man but also as the Son of God.

    The first three are known as the Synoptic Gospels (the word synoptic means same viewpoint), since many of the same incidents are reported in two or three of them, often in similar or even identical language. Scholars have attempted to explain the differences and similarities in the Synoptic Gospels, often by postulating that one writer copied from another or, more sophisticatedly, that two or all three of them had direct or indirect access to some of the same oral or written sources.

    The Acts of the Emissaries (Apostles). Luke is also the author of The Acts of the Emissaries, which could as well be called Luke, Part II (see the opening verses of both Luke and Acts). This book, in which Yeshua’s emissaries (apostles, Heb. shlikhim) Kefa and Sha’ul are the chief protagonists, describes the history of the early Messianic Community (that is, the church) from about 30 C.E. to 65 C.E. The setting is first in Yerushalayim, where believing in Yeshua was entirely an internal Jewish matter; and then, as the gospel spread, Y’hudah, Shomron, indeed … the ends of the earth (Acts 1:8)—that is, Rome, the pagan antithesis of Yerushalayim. A major purpose of the book of Acts is to prove that Gentiles can become Messianic without converting to Judaism. It is ironic that today popular opinion requires a reverse application of the book of Acts to show that Jews can become Messianic without converting to what has become identified as an alien religion, Christianity.

    The Letters. The rest of the B’rit Hadashah, except for the last book, consists of letters. The first thirteen are by Sha’ul, the emissary to the Gentiles (Rom. 11:13; Gal. 2:7–8). Five are to Messianic communities he founded in Greece—two to Corinth, one to Philippi, and two to Thessalonica (modern Salonika). Two are to communities he founded in what is now Turkey—Galatia and Ephesus; and two are to communities established by others—Colosse (near Ephesus) and Rome. These nine letters deal with issues of behavior and belief that arose in the several congregations. Of the remaining four, known as the Pastoral Letters, three are to his trainees Timothy (two letters) and Titus, and one, to Philemon, requests him to welcome back as a free brother a slave of his who ran away.

    Next is A Letter to a Group of Messianic Jews, otherwise known as To the Hebrews. Though sometimes attributed to Sha’ul, Apollos, or Priscilla and Aquila, its authorship is uncertain. Addressing a Messianic Jewish readership, it relates the new dispensation brought by Yeshua to the themes of the Tanakh. Following are a letter from Ya‘akov (James), the brother of Yeshua and leader of the Messianic Community in Yerushalayim; two letters from Kefa (Peter); three from Yochanan (John); and one from Y’hudah (Jude), another brother of Yeshua. As a group these are called the General Letters, or the Messianic Jewish letters in the CJB, which are concerned with matters of faith and practice and issues specific to the Messianic Jews of that day.

    Revelation. The final book of the B’rit Hadashah is The Revelation of Yeshua the Messiah to Yochanan, which contains descriptions of visions revealed by the resurrected and glorified Messiah to the emissary Yochanan (John) or, some believe, to a different Yochanan. It is also known as the Apocalypse, since it describes apocalyptic events—that is, end-time disasters and interventions of God in history connected with the final judgment of humankind. Containing over five hundred quotations from and allusions to the Tanakh, more than any other New Testament book, it resembles and draws on the visions of such writers as Yesha‘yahu (Isaiah), Yechezk’el (Ezekiel), Z’kharyah (Zechariah), and Dani’el. Some consider it to be speaking of what today is still in the future, others regard it as describing the whole age of history that began two thousand years ago, and still others believe its primary reference is to first-century events. Its figurative language gives room for such different interpretive approaches or for a combination thereof.

    V. OTHER FEATURES OF THE BIBLE

    Dating. Traditionally, the Torah dates from the fifteenth to thirteenth centuries B.C.E., depending on when Moshe lived. The Early Prophets traditionally date from the fourteenth to tenth centuries B.C.E., the Later Prophets from the ninth to fourth centuries B.C.E., and the Writings from the tenth to third centuries B.C.E. Many scholars accept later dates, up to the second century B.C.E.

    The earliest B’rit Hadashah books, such as Sha’ul’s letters to the Galatians, Thessalonians, and Corinthians, and probably the letter of Ya’akov, were written around 50 C.E., some twenty years after Yeshua’s death and resurrection. Sha’ul’s other letters date from the 50s and 60s, the Gospels and Acts in their essentially final form from between 65 and 85, and the other General Letters and Revelation from between 65 and 100. Some scholars believe that some New Testament books underwent final editing in the early second century C.E.

    The Canon. Scholars agree that the canon of the Torah achieved its present form before the time of ‘Ezra (around 445 B.C.E.), the Prophets later, and the Writings last. But the final review of the canon was made by the Council of Yavneh (Jamnia) convened around 90 C.E. by Rabbi Yochanan Ben-Zakkai in the wake of the destruction of the Temple by the Romans twenty years earlier. Several books now included in the Tanakh were questioned: Daniel and Ezekiel, because of their startling visions and experiences; Esther, because God is not mentioned in it; Song of Songs, because of its overtly sexual character; and Ecclesiastes, because of its depressed worldview (except for the last two verses, which redeemed it). Ecclesiasticus (not the same as Ecclesiastes) was rejected by the rabbis of Yavneh but is found in the Apocrypha, a collection of fifteen ancient Jewish books that include Tobit, Judith, 1–2 Maccabees, and the Wisdom of Solomon. Catholic and Anglican Bibles include the Apocrypha. Some sixty other ancient books are collectively called the Pseudepigrapha. English-language editions of the Apocrypha⁵ and the Pseudepigrapha⁶ are available.

    Besides the documents that now form the New Testament, there were written other versions of the good news, other histories of events in the early Messianic Community, and other discussions of doctrine and practice and other apocalypses.⁷ It was the early Messianic Community that exercised the spiritual discernment necessary to decide which books truly brought God’s message to humanity and which were lesser creations, perhaps of historical or spiritual value but not God-breathed. Quotations from B’rit Hadashah books are found in the noncanonical Teaching of the Apostles (80–100 C.E.), but the first list including books of the B’rit Hadashah was made by the heretic Marcion around 150 C.E. This product of error surely stimulated the development of an orthodox canon, such as appears in the Muratorian Fragment at the end of the second century, while the earliest known enumeration of exactly the twenty-seven books constituting today’s B’rit Hadashah, with neither additions nor omissions, is in the Thirty-Ninth Paschal Letter of Athanasius (367 C.E.). Though the list is late, the books themselves were used in Messianic congregations from the time they were written, just as the books of the Tanakh were an integral part of Judaism centuries before its canon was authoritatively determined by the Council of Yavneh.

    Tradition and Scholarship. The above introductory material reflects mainstream conservative Bible scholarship, which confirms most of the traditional views on these subjects. But during the past two centuries all the authorships have been challenged, likewise all the datings and the historicity of most of the events.

    Although the debate continues, it ought to be confined within certain limits controlled by facts and an awareness of assumptions. For example, there are handwritten manuscripts of portions of the New Testament from as early as the first half of the second century, disproving the more extreme suggestions that the New Testament was written two, three, or four hundred years after Yeshua. Also, some of the criticism is based on presuppositions that are religious in character but in opposition to the Bible, thus determining a negative conclusion a priori, e.g., a worldview of doubt or scientism that precludes the possibility of such miracles as the crossing of the Yam Suf (Red Sea) on dry land (Exod. 14–15), or a disbelief in the ability of the ancient writers to distinguish between real and imaginary events, or a too willing confidence that the early Messianic communities altered reports to fit their agenda.

    Although there is no lack of unanswered questions, many respected scholars nevertheless believe that the traditional authors are in fact the authors, that the early datings are correct, and—most importantly in the case of the B’rit Hadashah—that Yeshua really lived, "died for our sins, … and … was raised on the third day, in accordance with what the Tanakh says" (1 Cor. 15:3–4).

    VI. WHY THE BIBLE IS GOD’S WORD

    In the first paragraph of Section I, I wrote that the Bible is God’s word to humanity, the only completely reliable verbal communication God has given us. It is worthy of acceptance, belief, trust; it is his handbook for faith and practice. I owe readers who are not convinced of this an explanation of why I believe that behind the several authors of the Bible, the true Author is God; afterwards I will say why it makes a difference to think so.

    Theologians call this topic the divine inspiration of Scripture, where the word inspiration has its literal meaning, breathing into. Thus, in regarding God as the ultimate Author of the Bible, they do not mean that he dictated every word, so that the human authors were really only secretaries; but rather, that the authors often expressed what God had breathed into them through their own personalities in their own words. The alternative view is that the Bible may contain beautiful thoughts, high moral sentiments, wonderful stories, and great literature, inspired in the ordinary, humanistic sense, worthy of genius; but that it is not God himself speaking, telling us about himself, about ourselves, and about how to live.

    There are three reasons for considering the Bible to be inspired by God, God-breathed: it claims to be, it seems to be, and it proves to be.

    The Bible Claims to Be God’s Word. Over and over appear the words "ADONAI says or, in the thunderous phrase from the King James Version, Thus saith the LORD. These words are found in the Bible some 2,500 times, placed there by numerous authors over a period of more than a thousand years. By itself, this claim proves nothing; anyone can write, God says." But this claim is not made so very often; hence when it is made—and when many people believe it—it could be worth investigating to find out if it is true.

    The Bible Seems to Be God’s Word. Its breadth of subject matter, its wisdom, its deeply felt honesty, its understanding of the human condition, its expressions of joy, wonder, sadness, anger, and every other emotion, and its way of dealing with history and politics all delineate the character underlying the Bible to be an entity, a person, worthy of being called and honored as God, lover and creator of you and me and the universe. Some readers may find portions that seem less than divine or even contrary to their view of what God ought to say. I suggest that these readers consider changing their concept of God. For only in the Bible will one find the authoritative description of the God of the Bible, who he is, and what he ought to be. It is there where one should look for the paradoxes to be resolved—and also where it becomes clear that some antinomies (contradictory elements that resist resolution) will not be fully resolved, at least not in this world (two examples: free will and predestination, and Job’s problem—why bad things happen to good people).

    The Bible Proves to Be God’s Word. While not every statement in the Bible can be scientifically verified, some can. Historical and archeological studies are repeatedly providing evidence that places, events, and customs the Bible reports about were real. Since I moved to Isra’el in 1979, the newspapers have reported the discovery at Tel Dan, in the north of the country, of the first independent witness to the existence of King David, an ostracon (a piece of pottery) from his time inscribed with that name (it proves, of course, only that the name existed, not the king). Another discovery was of one of the pomegranates that hung from the robe of the cohen gadol (high priest; Exod. 28:33), and a third was a seal from the sixth century B.C.E. having on it the tetragrammaton—the oldest such evidence of this name. These do not prove the existence of God, but they demonstrate the reliability of the writers and suggest that what they say about the unverifiable might also be trustworthy.

    Why It Makes a Difference to Believe that God Wrote the Bible. On principle, I would not give science the last word in determining truth, because I don’t think faith should be relegated to a category of knowledge inferior to science. The philosophical underpinnings of the Western world are centered on two cities—Athens and Jerusalem. The Greeks developed philosophy in a rational manner, but largely at the expense of separating heart and head. Many psychological and spiritual ills stem from this separation (one can also speak of this separation as between body and soul). The Jews kept head and heart, body, and soul together and the Bible reflects this unitary view of human nature. The head has its way of knowing, and the heart has its way of knowing, and neither should be ignored. If head and heart are connected, then there is the possibility that what the Bible claims, seems, and proves to be will move the heart to respond in faith. If one believes that in the Bible God is speaking, one will be much more likely to take seriously its promises, threats, suggestions, and commands; and the result, I propose, will be a better life for oneself and the others one meets.

    VII. JEWISH TANAKH VERSUS CHRISTIAN OLD TESTAMENT

    The title of this section of the Introduction may perplex some readers, especially after the remarks in Section V, because it is usual to think of the Christian Old Testament and the Jewish Tanakh as the same. Actually, there are important differences, and for purposes of understanding the Complete Jewish Bible, these must now be addressed.

    Different Order for the Books. The most obvious difference, clear from the table of contents, is that the books of the Tanakh appear in an order different from those of the Old Testament (OT), as any Christian looking for the book of Malachi at the end of the Tanakh will quickly discover. As the acronym TaNaKh reminds us, the Hebrew Bible is divided into three parts: Torah (Law, Teaching), Nevi’im (Prophets), and K’tuvim (Writings). But Christians divide the OT into four parts: Pentateuch, Historical Books, Writings, and Prophets. Both the OT and Tanakh have the five books of Moshe first, whether one calls them the Torah or the Pentateuch. The Prophets section of the Tanakh is divided into the Early and Later Prophets. The Early Prophets correspond to the Historical Books of the OT minus the books of Ruth, 1–2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Esther, which are placed with the Writings. The Later Prophets are the same as the Prophets section of the OT, except that the Hebrew Bible places Lamentations and Daniel with the Writings. The Tanakh’s Writings section is larger than that of the OT, because it includes the eight books that in the OT are located elsewhere. Finally, in the Tanakh the Later Prophets come immediately after the Early Prophets, but in the OT the Prophets come last.

    Why these differences? Because the Christian OT follows the order found in the oldest manuscripts of the Septuagint, the translation of the Tanakh into Greek made by Greek-speaking Jews in Alexandria, Egypt, two or three centuries before Yeshua’s birth; while the Tanakh sequence was finalized in the Land of Isra’el after the time of ‘Ezra. This is the order Yeshua knew, as evidenced by his referring in Luke 24:44 to "the Torah of Moshe, the Prophets and the Psalms (by Psalms" he referred to the Writings section, which in the Tanakh begins with the book of Psalms, not Job, as in the OT).

    Different Number of Books. A second difference is that by Jewish reckoning, the Tanakh consists of twenty-four books, whereas Christians count thirty-nine in the Old Testament. This is because the Tanakh considers each of the following to be a single book: 1 and 2 Samuel, 1 and 2 Kings, the Twelve Minor Prophets (so called because their books are short—Hosea, Joel, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi), Ezra-Nehemiah, and 1 and 2 Chronicles. Thus what the OT counts as twenty books appears in the Tanakh as five.

    Different Names for the Books. A third difference is in the names. Many of the Tanakh books are simply called by their first words. What the OT calls Genesis, the Tanakh calls B’resheet (In the beginning). Exodus (the book about the Jewish exodus from Egypt) is called Sh’mot (Names), because the book starts out, These are the names… Leviticus (about the Levitical priesthood) is called Vayikra (And he called), from its initial words And he [God] called to Moshe… Lamentations is called Eikhah (How) as it begins, How lonely lies the city…

    The reader wanting further clarification on these three points of difference should examine carefully the tables of contents: the main one lists the books of the Bible by both their Hebrew and usual English names in the order followed in Jewish Bibles and in the Complete Jewish Bible; the second lists the books of the Tanakh by their usual English names in the Old Testament/Septuagint order familiar to Christians; the third table of contents lists all the books of the Bible by all the names in alphabetical order.

    Why did I choose the Jewish order and names for the CJB? To emphasize the Jewish unity of the Tanakh and the B’rit Hadashah—not just the unity, which all Christians recognize, but the Jewish unity, the fact that both Tanakh and B’rit Hadashah are Jewish through and through. When the Tanakh is dissected, with its parts rearranged and renamed, its Jewishness is also being taken apart. This is, then, just one more way in which the CJB reminds Christians that their faith is Jewish.

    At the same time, by presenting, as fully as the English language allows, the Jewishness of both Tanakh and B’rit Hadashah together in a single volume, I am placing the Jewishness of the B’rit Hadashah squarely in front of Jewish people who have absorbed the false idea that the New Testament is the Christian Bible and therefore has nothing to do with them as Jews. This

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1