Opinion Editor's Notebook Christian Missionaries And Anti-Missionaries Defining Your Jewish Beliefs MARTIN J. WARMBRAND SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS PHIL JACOBS EDITOR I here is a David and Goliath battle going on between a number of Jewish anti-mis- sionary groups and individ- uals and the evangelical Christian missionaries. The Christian missionary dri- ve is funded by more than $150 million. It has millions of volun- teer missionaries enlisted in its be- half. The Jewish counter-missionary campaign has a combined budget of less than $1 million. In ad- dition to the rabbi and cantor in your synagogue, there are fewer than 100 active full- and part-timers. The Christian missionary activity is directed specifical- ly at the young, middle-aged, elderly, intermarried, Russ- ian and other recent immi- grant Jews. However, this article will concentrate on evangelical ministries direct- ed toward young Jews. According to the several Jewish activists that I have interviewed, the young Jews, aged 15-35 with little or no Jewish education, are the most vulnerable. Missionar- ies are increasingly centering their efforts on high school and college students. Elie Wiesel summed it up best when he wrote: "In leaving us, these young people are accusing us of having let them go, or worse, of not noticing that they were go- ing• , the Rev. Moishe (born Martin) Rosen. The Rev. Rosen and his ad- herents have employed a persua- sive Jewish spin on their proselytizing. Using Christological emphasis and mistranslation of sacred Jew- ish texts, he was able to persuade these Jewish spiritual seekers that they were not renouncing Judaism by accepting the beliefs ofJews for Jesus; they were "becoming com- pleted Jews." The Hebrew-Christian move- ment has proven to be an embar- rassment to many mainline Christian groups. The Long Island Council of Churches charged Jews for Jesus with "engaging in sub- terfuge and dishonesty" and with "mixing symbols in ways that dis- tort their essential meaning." Before that focus begins, we need to have a clear understand- ing of the dimension and back- ground of the problem. There are 200-600 Christian missions who focus in part or entirely on the Jewish people. Many of them claim to be Jewish. Their names are "Messianic Jews," "Jews for Not only are the deceptive prac- Jesus," "Chosen People Ministries" tices offensive in themselves, but and others which use a variety of at the "Messiah 1995" convention Hebraic names. of the Messianic Jewish Alliance The Jews for Jesus movement of America, a new strategy to in- has been the most successful. The filtrate the Jewish community was organization was founded in 1970 adopted. A San Antonio, Texas, by an ordained Baptist minister, chapter of Hadassah discovered that two of its board members Martin J. Warmbrand is president were Messianic Jews. Similar in- of the American Jewish Public cidents have occurred in other Relations Society. Jewish organizations. The missionary activity is directed at the young. Our focus on Jewish youth be- gins here. Hundreds of children in a Jewish day school, in New Brunswick, N.J., were mailed a full-color issue of the "Hebrew Christian" newspaper, the Mes- sianic Times. Missions are found on all state and city college campuses. They are staffed by volunteers, not professional mis- sionaries. Of the millions of fun- damentalist and evangelical Christians who specialize in con- version activity, many-are the offspring who become high school classmates or college roommates to our Jewish youth. Our young people who go out of town to colleges and uni- versities are primary targets. They are away from family and friends. One group that is organized and anxious to be their new friends are Christ- ian fellowship missions. There are five to 10 college student Christian fellowship groups on almost every campus. The pull of wanting to be a part of a crowd of peers is pow- erful, especially if one is lone- some or in need of approval. Our students are made to feel not only valued but very important by active missionaries. The short-term goal of the anti- missionary movement is pre- venting conversions ofJews and reclaiming those who have con- verted. To this end, the Federa- tion of Jewish Men's Clubs (Conservative) and the Task Force on Missionaries and Cults, a project of the Jewish Commu- nity Relations Council of New York, will jointly publish and dis- tribute Countering Hebrew-Chris- tian Identity. The long-term goal is to maintain the integrity of Ju- daism as a community of faith and culture through ongoing Jew- ish education. For further information or coun- seling, contact David Horowitz at the United Israel World Union, (212) 688-7557; or Jews for Judaism at their Website, http /www.Jewsforjudaism.org. Hal Kosut helped research this ar- tick. TheDJN@aol . com 11 O Do You Think?" How far do you think the rift between Israel's chief rabbinate and the Diaspora will go? To respond: "So, What Do You Think?" 27676 Franklin Road, Southfield, MI 48034 Theresa and I were a couple of 7-year-olds playing togeth- er in the empty washing ma- chine crate. Yeah, you read that right. Don't be so self-right- eous. When we in our 40s were kids, an empty crate became a "fort" or a "house." That's when children had to think about play, but that's a different issue for another time. My mother, in style typical of the time, invited us in for milk and cookies. I remember how warm the melting chocolate chips were while dunking them into that cold milk. I also remember wiping the milk moustache off my face in disbelief when Theresa piped out, "Mrs. Jacobs, my mother was wrong. You are such nice people." My mother, not to let this one go, responded: "Wrong about what?" Theresa: "Even though you killed our savior, you are still nice people." Theresa was the nice Catholic girl down the street. Her big sis- ters were my babysitters. Her mother received a call from my mother. But Theresa's mother didn't back down. Yup, we killed him. My friend and I never played together again. I went around asking my par- ents, "Is it true? What savior? What's a savior? Did we really kill someone?" Fast forward. I'm sports editor of the Uni- versity of Maryland Diamond- back. rm driving with the news editor, a blonde-haired woman named Lisa. In her 1970 Chevy Nova is a magnet in the shape of a Coca Cola logo. Only it says, `Things Go Better With Jesus." No problem. I won't bring this up if she doesn't. Lisa invites me to a Friday night "dinner." Free food. Men- tion that to any college student and he's there. Campus Crusade for Christ — they were invited as well. They didn't show for the food. I didn't know that. I met many new "friends" that evening. They knew more about Judaism than I ever did, and they weren't even Jewish. I told them, "I really don't know much. I'm Reform." Bad answer. Fast forward again. I'm covering an assignment for our sister paper, the Bala, more Jewish Times. It's about Messianic Jews. I'm interview- ing people. I find out something scary. They're interviewing me. They're telling me they want to "share" with me what they have, what is better for me. I told them, "I really don't know much. I don't go to syna- gogue." Another bad answer. Flip gears again. Another story assignment on people who have become Or- thodox. Interviewing a man in his study. He's a former Buddhist who dabbled with other Eastern reli- gions. Now he's wearing a kippah, has a beard and his wife won't shake my hand. He stops the in- terview. "What do you believe in, Phil Ja- cobs?" I told the man that I was interviewing him. That didn't stop him. He re- peated the question. I told him that I wasn't into 'judging" peo- ple, that I left that up to God. The bad answers continue (just ask this guy). He points to his bookcases, which were heavily filled with prayerbooks, texts and volumes. He says, "You see these books? They contain God's law. So I guess there's the law according to God, and the law according to Phil Jacobs." Look, how am I supposed to know? I was raised Reform. Re- form? I didn't know what Re- form people believed in. I thought if you went to temple once a year, that made you Re- form. My point, in a long-winded way. So many of us are so insecure with our Judaism that we don't know what the right answers are for ourselves or our families. Quick. Name a leading software package — you can do it. Tell me about the Red Wings, and you spout statistics. We know more about the Heaven's Gate cult than we know about the ba- sics of Judaism. It's sad when we don't make learning anything Jewish a pri- ority. So when the Christian missionaries come along, and they will, they know more be- cause they've taken the time to learn more. And when the Jew- ish fringe, the ones who aren't part of the mainstream, make it into the media, judging every- one else, we go crazy and get in- dignant and call them names. That's not the answer. Do we define our Judaism, or do we let others define us? BELIEFS page 38 31