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THE MESSIAH AND THE BIRTH OF THE CHURCH
Jesus of Nazareth, Messiah of Israel, fully accomplished Israel's
mission by reproducing
the story of his people in his own life - with the exception of their sins and
unfaithfulness. We already see a
prefiguration of the life of Christ and a typological relationship between Israel and
Jesus in the life of Joseph the patriarch.
Just as
Israel, still in her infancy and counting only seventy people, left her land to
settle in Egypt, so the Son of God had to flee to Egypt in his infancy (Mt.
2:13-14). In fact, the whole story of
Joseph and his brothers is itself a type of the relationship between Jesus and
his people Israel. The striking similarities between the two are
presented in appendix A.
As Messiah of Israel, Jesus is a
new Moses, the prophet and deliverer about whom Moses himself had
spoken (Deut.
18:15). Christ will initiate a New
Exodus that will redeem not only Israel this time, but all of
mankind from the slavery of sin. Before
He does this, however, He reproduces Israel's first Exodus in His own
life. Like Israel,
He begins his life by coming out of Egypt with the Holy Family (Mt.
2:15, 20-21). As Israel passed through the waters of the Red Sea,
so Jesus passes through the waters of the Jordan at the beginning of
his
public ministry and is baptized by John the Baptist (Mt. 3). Israel
was tempted for forty years in the Sinai wilderness; Jesus goes into
the desert
for forty days where He is tempted by the devil, but unlike Israel,
passes
the test and remains faithful to God the Father (Mt. 4:1-11). Whereas
Moses gave the Old Law to Israel at Mount Sinai, Jesus gives to Israel
a New
Law from the Mount of Beatitudes (Mt. 5-7). God the Father sustained
his people in the desert by sending them manna,
and so Jesus also provides bread for his people through the
multiplication of
the loaves (Mt. 14:15-21), which is itself a sign of the heavenly
Eucharistic
bread that would come later. Jesus also
identifies Himself with the Davidic king, as we see in the triumphal
entry into
Jerusalem on
Palm Sunday when He is acclaimed as king and "Son of David." Before His
passion, Jesus institutes the New
Covenant with the house of Israel
and the house of Judah
that the prophet Jeremiah had spoken of (Jer. 31:31). Like the Mosaic
covenant, the New Covenant is
sealed with blood (Ex. 24:8, Mt. 26:28). Yet, irony of ironies, Jesus
is rejected by His own people - the very people
who had been waiting for centuries in eager expectation for the coming
of the
Messiah. Forsaken, betrayed, beaten and
spat upon, Jesus must take the way to the cross where He offers Himself
as a
pure, unblemished victim, the new Passover Lamb who is slain to take
away the
sins of the world.
Why, then, did Israel reject
her own Messiah? At the time that Christ
came, the Jews were longing for a political liberator who would come and free
them from the Roman occupying power and restore the Davidic kingdom in all of
its political and military strength. But contrary to these expectations,
Jesus did not come to deliver the Jews from the Romans. He came, rather, to establish a spiritual,
everlasting kingdom of which the Davidic kingdom at its peak was only a shadow
and type. This kingdom would be founded
by his death on the cross. He was the
suffering servant of Isaiah 53, the innocent lamb led to the slaughter,
stricken for the transgressions of his people, who came to save the "lost sheep
of the tribes of Israel." Moreover, not only was he sent
"to raise up the tribes of Jacob and to restore the survivors of Israel," he was
also the one given as a light to the nations so that God's salvation may reach
the ends of the earth (Isa. 49:6).
Through Him, all people could now come to the knowledge of the God of Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob and partake in the promises made to Israel. With the dividing wall now broken, Gentiles
could be joined with the commonwealth of Israel to become One New Man, Jew and
Gentile reconciled to each other and members of the new household of God, the
Church (Eph. 2:11-22). They were to be
united in the new spiritual kingdom that would give them access to the heavenly
sanctuary of the New Jerusalem, present in the liturgy of the New Covenant and
veiled under sacramental appearances.
But history shows a different
picture. We are faced today with the
troubling fact that the Jewish segment of the Church soon completely
disappeared, leaving behind an exclusively Gentile Body of Christ. What happened? Why did the Church, Jewish in origin and
whose very purpose was the unification of Jew and Gentile, end up completely
divorced from Judaism?
Of course, a large part of Israel from the outset did not
recognize the time of her visitation. We
can only inadequately explain this mystery of why the Jews failed to recognize
their own Messiah. First, as Stephen
pointed out before his death, Israel was blinded by the same unbelief that
prevented her from entering the Promised Land, made her reject the prophets,
and led her into exile (Acts 7:51-53).
Her hardness of heart, combined with her expectation of a national
deliverer, kept her from recognizing the humble servant of the Lord who came to
redeem her from her sins. She was
neither expecting nor prepared for the radical transformation of the Old
Covenant brought by the New which would involve the end of the Levitical
priesthood and of the animal sacrifices.
Second, from the perspective of the divine purpose, God permitted this
blindness in order to bring salvation to the Gentiles and riches to the
world. Yet this does not dispense us
from asking ourselves whether the Church herself does not at least bear partial
responsibility for Israel's
unbelief and separation from her Messiah for 2,000 years.
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