…Tertullus laid charges against Paul in
the following address to the governor:
"Your Excellency…we have found him
to be a troublemaker…a ringleader of the sect known as
the Nazarenes…
Paul said…
"I admit that I
follow the Way, which they call a sect. I worship the
Elohim (G-d) of our ancestors, and I firmly believe the Jewish
law and everything written in the books of prophecy. I
have hope in Elohim, just as these men do, that He will
raise both the righteous and the ungodly.”
Acts 24:2,5,11-15 (NLT)
Put simply, the world has so embraced the
story of how the apostle Paul took a small Jewish
apocalyptic sect and transformed it into a global
Gentile movement, that it has forgotten the very first
followers of Jesus, otherwise known as “Nazarenes”.
What were they like, and how did their beliefs differ
from the Roman based model that sprang up later? Even
from the Catholic fathers, we are given some tantalizing
clues:
“But these sectarians…did not call
themselves Christians, but “Nazarenes,” however they are
simply complete Jews. They use not only the New
Testament but the Old Testament as well, as the Jews
do…They have no different ideas, but confess everything
exactly as the Law proclaims it and in the Jewish
fashion, except for their belief in the Messiah, if you
please! For they acknowledge both the resurrection of
the dead and the divine creation of all things, and
declare that God is one, and that His Son is Y’shua the
Messiah. They are trained to a nicety in Hebrew. For
among them the entire Law, Prophets and the…Writings…are
read in Hebrew, as they surely are by the Jews. They
are different from the Jews, and different from
Christians, only in the following. They disagree with
the Jews for they have come to faith in Messiah; but
since they are still fettered with the Law—circumcision
and the Sabbath, and the rest—they are not in accord
with Christians…They have the Good News according to
Matthew in its entirety in Hebrew. For it is clear they
still preserve this, in the Hebrew alphabet, as it was
originally written.”
Epiphanus; Panarion
29 (fourth century)
Are these Nazarenes actually the unknown
continuation of the Apostle Paul’s ministry? What about
the “Jerusalem Church” mentioned so frequently by Paul
and headed up by Peter and James the Just? Why is it
only now that we can tell the story of Christendom’s
most influential group throughout its first fifty years
and—above all—what happened to them?
Furthermore, even a casual glance at any
New Testament will show the Gospel of Matthew given the
honor of being the first book in the collection. Such an
arrangement, directly derived from ancient belief of
what was written when, is currently ignored because
modern scholarship accords this honor to Mark.
Similarly, while the scholarly world has all but
forgotten the Nazarenes, they have proclaimed almost
universally that the New Testament was originally
written in Greek, despite strong early testimony and
clear textual evidence to the contrary.
However, since the fourth century, the
Nazarenes at some time seem to have vanished off the
face of the earth. As a result, their existence has now
been rendered into little more than a footnote in
history, and their connection to the original Christian
movement and their Semitic scriptures, have been
believed to be lost forever.
That is, until now...
Now, for the first time, a modern
Nazarene breaks his silence and details the results of
more than four years of research in his provocative new
book “Signs of the Cross”. As a work destined to turn
upside down the current Greek compositional model of the
New Testament, “Signs of the Cross” breaks new ground in
a wide variety of areas, such as:
-
Bringing to the West fresh insights
from Yeshua of Nazareth’s native language. Aramaic,
the rarest and least understood language in the
world, is also the only route to understanding the
true message of the man that one billion people
proclaim as God.
-
Combining the most important biblical
textual theory of the past three centuries with
early Church writings -- and even overlooked
information from the New Testament itself-- to
answer the question: Who is Apostle Q?
-
Proving that the later Jewish
traditions recorded in the Talmud were influenced by
Rabbi Yeshua to a much greater degree than has been
previously supposed. Additionally, the aspects and
ideas that have been most commonly maligned as pagan
influences can instead be shown to be well rooted in
Jewish thought and tradition.
-
Demonstrating clearly that Yeshua,
Paul, and all the writers of the New Testament, are
following the time honored traditions of rabbinic
scriptural analysis at both the poetry and prose
levels. This discipline, pioneered by the
grandfather of Paul’s own original teacher, has for
all intents and purposes been set aside by
Hellenistic Christianity and, as a result of this
deprivation, created many gross errors.
-
Detail the remarkable and almost lost
history of the Nazarene movement from its first
century beginnings to the incredible survival of its
assemblies into the modern age. How has a group
originally founded by the apostle Peter fought
against all odds and obstacles to still be a
recognizable entity today with its culture and
traditions intact? What are the historical
implications to both the oldest Aramaic-Christian
group in the world as well as to the current state
of Messianic Judaism?
-
Cutting edge science and linguistics
are employed to answer some of the most perplexing
questions in the history of the faith. Is there a
genuine astronomical explanation for the Star of
Bethlehem? Did Luke really make a mistake regarding
the rules and times of the Roman census? How did
the strange and almost extinct religion of the Magi,
along with proven astronomical phenomena, guide each
step they made to Bethlehem and reveal the true time
of the birth?
-
And finally, “Signs of the Cross”
will also explore fully other critical issues, such
as the only possible Scripture based scenario for
the “lost years” and the connection between Jesus,
the Essenes, and the enigmatic Dead Sea Scrolls.
These mysteries, and many others, will
have their surprising answers revealed for the first
time. In the end then, “Signs
of the Cross” is a must read for anyone
serious about looking at all the relevant evidence in
the quest for the historical Jesus.
