Monday, November 4

‘Jewish Messiah’ spots on secular cable channels draw stable response, evangelist says

Television advertisements presenting Jesus as “the Jewish Messiah” are producing a powerful response, the Messianic Jewish broadcaster airing the spots mentioned.

According to Sid Roth, who recognized himself as a “Jewish believer in Messiah Jesus,” the advertisements have generated greater than 60,000 visits to an internet site providing a free book during which the District of Columbia native affords what he calls “irrefutable proof” of his declare.

Of these web site guests, 10,229 had downloaded the e book as of July 18, Mr. Roth mentioned.



One commercial opens with pictures of Jewish worshippers studying historic Scriptures as Mr. Roth narrates, “When I read the 53rd Chapter of the Jewish prophet Isaiah, to my Orthodox Jewish father, he screamed, stop reading to me about Jesus. When I told him I was reading Hebrew Scriptures given to me by our rabbi, boy was he shocked. Isaiah 53 was written 800 years before Jesus was even born, yet perfectly describes him.”

The advert, which is airing on Fox News Channel and Newsmax, goes on to supply the book through an internet site, www.sidroth.org/assume. Mr. Roth mentioned the response of tens of hundreds within the U.S. is “unprecedented stuff” for Jewish evangelism.

“These people have never been able to think for themselves because they’ve never had the facts expressed,” he mentioned.

Mr. Roth, who hosts a well-liked tv program, “It’s Supernatural” that airs on a number of Christian satellite tv for pc and cable networks, mentioned his ministry group plans to air the spots on MSNBC and CNBC, in addition to share the advertisements on social media. He mentioned the spots on social media considered in Israel resulted in 6,011 downloads of his e book about encountering the Jewish messiah.

He mentioned that whereas his ministry had accomplished mass mailings of his e book to Jewish households prior to now, totaling almost 3.9 million copies, “most books that are mailed unsolicited ended up in the trash. But if you purposely downloaded it yourself, there’s something in there you want to read.”

While the early Christian church was composed virtually solely of Jewish believers in Jesus, current day outreaches to Jews have been controversial. Persecution of Jews by Christians within the Middle Ages via World War II and past has soured many on the idea, whereas others say Jesus didn’t meet rabbinic standards for the messiah, together with the ushering in of an period of world peace.

In 2013, a Pew Research Center survey of American Jews discovered 34% saying that perception in Jesus was “not incompatible with Jewish identity,” however 60% rejected the notion that Jewish religion can embody such a perception. An further 6% mentioned they “don’t know.” 

Boston University professor Ingrid Anderson, writing for The Conversation in 2018, cited estimates of between 175,000 to 200,000 Messianic Jewish believers within the United States who meet in 300 congregations nationally. A 2021 Pew Research Center examine reported that 5.8 million U.S. adults establish as Jewish.

In 2017, a ballot sponsored by the Jews for Jesus evangelistic group discovered one-fifth of Jewish adults born between 1984 and 1999 consider Jesus was God in human kind. The numbers counsel a possible acceptance of the Christian message by some on this cohort, however there hasn’t been a mass motion in that route but.

Mr. Roth believes a revival is imminent, nevertheless.

“Every 100 years in America, there is a legitimate move of God’s spirit and a whole new crop of Christians come aboard,” he mentioned. “We’re coming into what the Bible refers to as ‘the fullness of the Gentile age.’ Scripture says that when we come into the fullness of the Gentile age, the spiritual scales will come off the eyes of Jewish people.”

Representatives of the Orthodox Union, based because the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, and Jews for Judaism, a “counter-missionary” group, didn’t reply to requests for remark.

Content Source: www.washingtontimes.com