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PROPHECY LED ME TO THE MESSIAH
By Martin Wolf
MY QUESTION
I was born in a Jewish home and brought up in the traditions of my people,
Israel. In our home the Sabbath was faithfully kept. On Friday night, as the sun
went down, my mother would bentchen licht (light the Sabbath candles), and my
father would say the Kiddish (prayer for the Sabbath). On the Sabbath, we would
attend the services in the synagogue.
Although, at the time, I did not fully appreciate having to go to the synagogue
or to Chedar (Hebrew school), as I look back I am very thankful for my religious
training. For example, I never had any doubts that the Tenach (Old Testament)
was really the Word of the Living God. My mother used to read to us from the
Scriptures. When I attended the Sabbath services I saw men touch their tallit
(prayer shawls) to the Scrolls as these Scrolls were carried around the
sanctuary, and then kiss their shawls on the spot where it touched the Scroll.
As a youngster I thought, “You don’t show such reverence and respect to a book
of fairy tales.” Thus, I learned both at home and in the synagogue, to respect
and believe the Word of God.
I also learned about the Mashiach (Messiah) and was eagerly awaiting His coming.
I knew one day He would come and bring redemption, salvation, and peace. In
Chedar I was taught the “Thirteen Principles of Faith.” In this connection, two
of these “Principles” stand out most vividly: “I believe with perfect faith in
the coming of the Messiah … [and] I believe with perfect faith that all the
words of the prophets are true.”
Learning about God, His Word, and the Messiah, however, made me realize
something which began to bother me. From the Bible I was that God was holy,
just, and righteous. At the same time I saw myself as being the very opposite. I
asked myself, “How cold I have contact with this great God as did Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, and the prophets? What could I do to be forgiven for my sins?” Oh
yes, I knew that there was sin (rebellion against God’s Holy Law) in my life and
that I would have to stand one day before Him.
Of course, we kept the Jewish festivals and High Holidays. Yom Kippur (Day of
Atonement) is the most solemn day of the Jewish calendar. It is spent in fasting
and praying for the forgiveness of sins. It is the day in which, according to
Jewish tradition, God records in “the book of life” whether you will have life
or death, health or sickness, success or failure for the coming year. When
people passed away or became sick, I asked myself, “Does this mean that God
didn’t hear their prayers, or perhaps they were not forgiven?”
My Search
As Yom Kippur approached in the year of my Bar Mitzvah, I wanted to really know
that I would be forgiven for my sin. I realized that, as I became a “Son of the
Law” (Bar Mitzvah), I would be fully responsible and would have to answer to God
personally for my sin. This frightened me. Thus that Yom Kippur stands out in my
mind.
Just before I became Bar Mitzvah I was in the synagogue with my parents for Yom
Kippur and saw an old man two or three rows ahead of me. He had a long tallit,
and he was praying to God and beating his chest and weeping. He had been fasting
as we all had, and he was praying for forgiveness of his sins. I thought, “This
man knows all the ritual, all the prayers; he must know all there is to know
about forgiveness. I am going to ask him whether he has the assurance that his
sins are forgiven.”
I waited until the end of the service. As the sun was going down and we were
leaving the synagogue, I went over to him and said, “Sir, do you have the
forgiveness of your sins? Do you know that your sins are forgiven?”
I can still see the tears coursing down his face; he had been crying the whole
day. Looking at me, he replied, “Son, I only hope so; I only hope so.”
I thought to myself, “What chance do I have? I don’t know all these prayers and
rituals. I don’t know all the traditions. If he doesn’t know that his sins are
forgive, how can I know?”
Thinking that I could never have an answer to these questions, I tried to put
them out of my mind. As I grew older I realized that merely following traditions
and going through the rituals did not satisfy the need and longing of my heart.
In college I continued the study of French, which I had began in high school,
for I planned to be a teacher. At a French Club dinner, I met the young woman
who later became my wife. One year after we were married we went to France to
further my education.
While in France we talked about the Bible, and my wife asked me whether I had
ever read the Brit Hadasha (New Testament). When I answered “No”, she suggested
that we read it aloud together. Thinking over her suggestion, I reasoned, “No
one in my family would know or could object.” After all, I was 21 years old,
6,000 miles from home, and I thought, “Well, why not?” So I opened the New
Testament and saw the first verse in the book of Matthew. It says, “The book of
the generation of Jesus the Messiah, the son of David, the son of Abraham.”
I said, “Wait a minute. David, Abraham - these people I know. What does this
Christian man, Matthew, know about these Jews?” That is when I found tout the
Matthew was a Jew. His last name was Levi.
I read down a little further, “Now all this was done, that it might be fulfilled
which was spoken of the Lord, by the prophet.” Prophet? What prophet? The Old
Testament prophets, I was told. So for the first time in my life I really went
into the Old Testament. But I went in with a belligerent attitude. My purpose in
reading the prophets was to prove that Matthew did not know anything about the
Old Testament.
My Observation
Little by little I began comprehending for myself the prophecies concerning the
Messiah. Isaiah 7:14: “Therefore the Lord himself shall give you a sign; behold,
a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel.”
Isaiah 9:6: “For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and his name
shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The Mighty God, The Everlasting Father,
The Prince of Peace.” Then I read in Micah, “But thou, Bethlehem Ephratah,
though thou be little among the thousands of Judah, yet out of thee shall come
forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel; whose goings forth have been from
of old, from everlasting” (5:2). That is Yeshua Hamaschiach (Jesus the Messiah).
As a Jew I had to be honest with myself. I couldn’t say, “Well, because
tradition says I am not supposed to believe these prophecies, I won’t.” I had to
believe them because in Hebrew school I had learned the Thirteen Principles of
Faith. “If my own prophets are telling me about Yeshua, the Messiah,” I
reasoned, “why shouldn’t I believe them?”
I had been raised with the hope of Messiah’s coming. No one, however, had
bothered to tell me that the Tanach - the Old Testament - talks in detail about
Him. I found in Isaiah 53 (which is not read in the synagogues) these words: “He
was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities … and with
his stripes we are healed. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned
every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all”
(vv. 5-6).
It was with fear and trembling that I considered believing in Messiah Jesus,
because here was something that I never thought would happen to Martin Wolf,
never in a million years. “How do I know for sure?” I asked my wife.
“Well, you pray,” she asked.
“I’m a good Jew; I’ve prayed,” I told her.
“You have to pray in the Name of the Lord Jesus,” was her astounding reply.
I prayed in this One’s Name? But I wanted to know for sure, so I decided to ask
God.
I do not even remember the words any more, but as I lay awake in bed one night I
looked up toward the ceiling and told God that if Jesus was really the Messiah
and would forgive my sins I would accept Him. I prayed, “If this is all true, I
ask this in Jesus’ name.”
My Find
I’ll be honest with you. I thought that the ceiling was going to cave in, so
different was this prayer from any I had ever prayed. No one could imagine what
was going on inside of me. But the ceiling did not cave in. No lights flashed;
no bells rang. Into my heart, however, came such peace that I knew the prayer I
had prayed was right. I knew I had found the Messiah and had passed from death
into life. I had forgiveness of my sins, not because of anything I had done, nor
because I deserved it, but because of what He had done for me. I had come to Him
with my burdens, and He had given me rest.
Life has not been easy since then, but it has been wonderful. And the way God
has led and provided our needs has been beyond what I could have ever expected.
I would not trade this new life for anything. I now have the peace that no
education, no stocks, nor bonds, could ever give. Possessions can vanish
overnight, but this peace stays.
I have not told you the whole story, but just shared a little of what happened
to one Yiddish boy to whom the Lord has given eternal life. And I thank Him for
it. If you, who are reading this account, have not as yet found the Messiah and
believed in Him, you have missed the full meaning of being a Jew and missed the
whole purpose of life.
I sincerely invite you to consider prayerfully these and many other of the more
than 450 Old Testament references which the sages of Israel attributed to the
Person of the Messiah. As you search the Scriptures with an open heart and open
mind you too will find the peace of God that passes all understanding.
Page last revised:
08/26/03 02:07:46 PM
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