I’ll check it out. Thanks.
Well, Israel is the Jewish homeland now right, so all the Jews not currently living there will return, and areas like the Temple Mount currently controlled by Muslims will be returned to Israel so that the temple can be rebuilt?
Also, how long will this peace last? Since the Messiah will be human, he’ll grow old and die. Will there be a successor, or will the world return to the way it use to be?
So, if I understand, he’ll do two things.
- Unite all Jews into a Jewish utopia by restoring their homeland and religion completely.
and - Cause all other peoples and nations to worship God.
There are going to be differing opinions, but I would say there are two possibilities:
a) He will lead the non-Israelite Jews back to the holy land
b) The Jews will be exiled from the holy land again and he will lead them back.
I can only imagine by what means the temple will be rebuilt, and what will happen to the Dome of the Rock. Remember that there’s no reason to believe that the messiah will come any time in the near future.
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Also, how long will this peace last? Since the Messiah will be human, he’ll grow old and die. Will there be a successor, or will the world return to the way it use to be?
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I’d guess it is forever. The Messiah is more of an initiator than someone with godly powers. I think the messianic age is “the time after the messiah comes”, which isn’t limited to his lifetime. I may be wrong about that.
what about the Messiah ben-Joseph & Messiah ben-David concepts? also, what about the theorized connections of the heavenly Melchizedek & the Archangel Michael & Metatron/Enoch to Messiah?
finally, how about the possibility advanced by Jewish scholar Pinchas Lapide that although Jesus was NOT the Messiah, he could come back (either in his risen self, which Lapide believed he had in common with Elijah, or in gilgul) to become the Messiah?
Sua,
My apologies for the delay.
The coming of the messiah is a fundemental belief in Judaism. Maimonides lists it among the 13 fundamental beliefs of the religion.
Zev Steinhardt
Many non-Orthodox Jews understand the Messiah figuratively–that one of these days, people will realize that God wants us to be nice to each other, and when that happens, the time of the Messiah will have come.
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What about them? These are concepts that are brought up in the Talmud. However, the discussions about them are somewhat less than clear and aside from a few specific references, not much is said about them. When messianic topics are discussed, they usually refer to the Davidic messiah.
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also, what about the theorized connections of the heavenly Melchizedek & the Archangel Michael & Metatron/Enoch to Messiah?
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Well, aside from the fact that the messiah will be a descendant of Enoch (as all people on earth are), I fail to see a connection (from a Jewish POV). Likewise, I’m not familar with the Malchitzedek/Michael connection you’re referring to.
I’m not familiar with this person, but his points fail on several levels:
(1) The messiah will not rise from the dead. Indeed, while Jews do have a belief in a ressurection of the dead, this will not occur until after the messiah arrives. So Jesus (assuming he otherwise meets the criteria) could not arise from the dead to be the messiah.
(2) Gilgul (reincarnation) is not a fundamental Jewish belief. One can dismiss it and still be a Jew in good standing. And even if Jesus did come back as another person to be the messiah, well then it would be on account of his being this new person, and not Jesus.
(3) Elijah did not die. He ascended to heaven physically. And in any event, all Jewish commentators agree (based on Malachi 3) that Elijah is not the messiah, but will herald the messianic era.
Zev Steinhardt
My own interpretation, as a Conservative Jew:
Hebrew is a gender-positive language; every noun has a gender, and every verb has a masculine and feminine form. There is no equivalent to the English gender-neutral “it;” everything is a “he” or a “she.”
(Two quick examples: Yom Tov, lit. “good day,” meaning a festival. The word for “day” takes the masculine tov. Cf. Shanah tovah, lit “Have a good year,” the traditional New Year greeting. The word for “year” takes the feminine tovah.)
Gender-positive languages have issues with groups of collective gender and of unknown gender. In my experience (mainly with Hebrew, and with other people studying Latin), gender-positive languages use the masculine gender for a mixed group and when the gender is unknown.
Accordingly, I interpret the prophesies’ use of masculine gender for the messiah as proper grammar, for we don’t know who will be the messiah until the time comes. Thus, I allow the possibility that the messiah will be female.