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Why the Jewishness of Jude Matters, Part 3

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Why is the Jewish tone of the epistle of Jude significant? I’ve written two blog posts about this topic (see here and here) to accomplish a couple of things. First, I wanted to establish that Jude’s letter does indeed have a Jewish slant to it. Most likely he wrote to Jewish Christians who were familiar with the Scriptures and Jewish religious traditions. 

Second, Jewish aberrations of the gospel in the New Testament are usually legalistic. Proponents of this type of theology, called “Judaizers,” stress the need for those who believe in Jesus to conform to the dictates of the Mosaic Law. To be saved, one must keep the rules and regulations laid out in the Torah. Doing so will help Christians avoid the sins that pervade society. Those who obey the Law of Moses won’t worship idols, practice theft or lying, or live solely for themselves.

But what I’ve found odd is that the heresy Jude and Peter confront in their letters reflects the beliefs and behaviors of Gentiles more than Jews. Like I’ve said, I can understand why Peter, writing to Gentile Christians, would oppose it. But most Jews wouldn’t have been tempted to buy into what the heretics were teaching. So why was Jude concerned about the impact it might have on the spiritual welfare of Jewish Christians?

The apostle lets us know early in his letter.

Dear friends, although I was very eager to write to you about the salvation we share, I felt compelled to write and urge you to contend for the faith that was once for all entrusted to God’s holy people. 4For certain individuals whose condemnation was written about long ago have secretly slipped in among you. They are ungodly people, who pervert the grace of our God into a license for immorality and deny Jesus Christ our only Sovereign and Lord. – Jude 3-4

Some key words and phrases jump out at us: salvation, the faith, grace, and the denial of Jesus Christ. Jude wanted to dig into and celebrate the redeemed status we have through the Lord. This epistle could have been a recital of all that Jesus did for us, but circumstances forced him to rally Christians to the defense of the gospel.

The heretics were corrupting the good news, but they were doing so in ways that were the opposite of the Judaizers challenged elsewhere in the New Testament (particularly by Paul).

Jude lays two charges against the false teachers: they transform God’s grace and they deny Jesus.

Instead of minimizing the grace of God, as many of the Judaizers did, these heretics treated it as a license for selfishness. The verb translated “pervert” (metatithemi) means to transpose, transfer, or change. It can also mean to pass over or fall away.

Paul uses the same word when he confronts the Galatians about their adoption of the Judaizing error.

“I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting the one who called you to live in the grace of Christ and are turning to a different gospel” – Galatians 1:6

The Galatian Christians were in danger of adopting a legalistic version of the faith. Jude’s churches were at risk of embracing a libertine one. Opposite heresies but the same goal: distance disciples from Jesus Christ. Diminish the person and work of the Savior. Degrade grace.

That’s not the faith once and for all given to God’s people!

The heretics were correct to stress the value and importance of grace in the life of a believer. But they perverted the Lord’s mercy and kindness into an excuse or justification for sinfulness. 

Why would this teaching tempt Jewish Christians? Because if they took the gospel seriously, they might conclude that the good news dismisses any need for spiritual discipline. What the Law of Moses describes, a life dedicated to God and pleasing to Him, the gospel provides. 

Grace is not permission to sin up a storm! It’s not God’s approval of our base impulses. The gospel doesn’t work that way!

The life Jesus calls us to is one based on God’s grace. By His Spirit, He makes us into the people He wants us to be. The gospel doesn’t lower God’s standards for His people; instead, it elevates us by giving us the capacity to live like Christ.

The Jewish Christians receiving Jude’s letter were trained by the upbringing to respect the Lord and honor Him by living a righteous life. When they heard the gospel, they learned that Christ fulfills the demands of the Law and enables them to live as God had intended.

The gospel Jesus offers us the grace of God which invites us to a new life and empowers us to fulfill it.

By contrast, the gospel the heretics were espousing threw out any notion of God’s righteous requirements. In doing so, these false teachers had to contradict what Christ taught and modeled. In other words, they denied His authority. They’d feign respect for Jesus, but by what they said and what they did, these heretics rebelled against the Son of God.

In the end, all they had was a message of pleasure-seeking. And that’s not much of a gospel!

Jude counters this heresy by reminding Christians of the exalted status of Jesus as their Master and Ruler. He doesn’t advocate them returning to the Law of Moses. That would be one way of fighting fleshly desires, but it’s not the way of the gospel.

Rather, Jude points believers to Christ. He makes demands, the gospel challenges us, but it’s only in loyalty to the Lord that we find true fulfillment.

There’s nothing wrong with discipline in itself, but removed from God’s grace, it becomes a burden none of us can bear. But we needn’t quit the battle. The gospel is worth fighting for, the Christian life is worth striving for.

Jesus is God’s gracious gift to us. Let’s always treasure Him!

Why the Jewishness of Jude Matters, Part 2

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The apostles Jude and Peter each wrote letters to different churches about a similar topic. The subject concerned heretics and their defective and dangerous understanding of the gospel. But as we discussed in last week’s post, Peter addressed Gentile Christians while Jude instructed Jewish ones. Same topic but different audiences.

I believe the Jewish tone of Jude’s letter is significant, but first, I had to establish that the apostle was in fact writing to Jewish believers in Jesus. That’s what we covered last week, but it still seems odd to me that Jude would feel the need to warn them about this heresy.

Why is that?

Because the New Testament is pretty consistent in showing us that the Jews who were distorting the gospel were doing so in a legalistic fashion. 

This started early in the history of the church. Luke reports that “certain people came down from Judea to Antioch and were teaching the believers: ‘Unless you are circumcised, according to the custom taught by Moses, you cannot be saved’” (Acts 15:1). The apostle Paul and others fought against this claim (Acts 15:2).

Paul repeats his resistance to this legalistic interpretation of the gospel in several of his letters.

Most of the churches he started were of mixed ethnicity. Congregations consisted of Jews and Gentiles brought together through their faith in Christ. But within these fellowships, Jewish issues, particularly about the role of the Mosaic Law, showed up quite a bit. Bible scholars ascribed the label “Judaizers” to those in the church who prioritized the Law to the detriment of the gospel.

For example, Paul informed the Galatians that “we who are Jews by birth and not sinful Gentiles 16know that a person is not justified by the works of the law, but by faith in Jesus Christ. So we, too, have put our faith in Christ Jesus that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by the works of the law, because by the works of the law no one will be justified” (Galatians 2:15-16).

And in the next chapter, he wrote that “Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us, for it is written: ‘Cursed is everyone who is hung on a pole.’ 14He redeemed us in order that the blessing given to Abraham might come to the Gentiles through Christ Jesus, so that by faith we might receive the promise of the Spirit” (Galatians 3:13-14).

To the church at Colossae, Paul insisted, “do not let anyone judge you by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day. 17These are a shadow of the things that were to come; the reality, however, is found in Christ” (Colossians 2:16-17).

The New Testament is clear, then, that some Jewish believers tried to reduce the gospel to the strictures of the Law of Moses. In their minds, legalism was the key to holiness. By contrast, Paul asserted the sufficiency of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

What’s strange to me is that in his own letter, Jude warns Jewish Christians about an opposite error, what we might call a “libertine” heresy. The behavior of its proponents, described in vss. 4, 12, and 16, is quite fleshly and selfish. These heretics advocated the fulfillment of one’s passions and desires without restrictions.

This is the opposite of legalism!

So why did Jude alert fellowships of Jewish believers about this teaching? It seems they wouldn’t have been tempted by such appeals. If anything, strict obedience to the Law of Moses might be more in line with their upbringing and mindset.

Yet Jude seems worried that Jewish followers of Jesus might succumb to a corrupt gospel that permitted, even demanded, the unfettered pursuit of fleshly lusts.

I understand why the apostle Peter, writing to Gentiles, might show such concern. After the Lord delivered them from pagan excesses, they could fall back into old habits.

But Jewish Christians?

It doesn’t fit!

So it leaves me wondering why Peter and Jude, overseeing two different church constituencies, would warn both about a heresy that ostensibly would only appeal to Gentiles.

The apostles explain that the arrival and conduct of these false teachers has Old Testament precedent. Although the heresy might seem new to the churches, it has a long pedigree. God has dealt with similar problems in the past, so He can and will handle this one, too.

In the next post, we’ll go over the passages in each letter that lay out the Old Testament context for heretics in the New Testament. But for now, let’s remember that spiritual battle is an unavoidable aspect of life in the Spirit. Our loyalty to Jesus puts us at odds with the world, the flesh, and the devil, and we feel their backlash.

The good news is that Christ, Whom we trust, is able to deliver and vindicate us. He gives us the authority and wisdom we need to combat spiritual opponents and come out victorious.

As we stand together in the Word, we can overcome the tests of our faith, even those that don’t seem all that difficult. Actually, it’s at those times we need to be most careful. As Paul advised the Corinthians, “if you think you are standing firm, be careful that you don’t fall!” (1 Corinthians 10:12).

Good advice for Gentile Christians and for Jewish Christians, too!

with Bob Condly

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