Catholic Exchange

Jewish Heritage and the Tribe of Judah

Question: If we can trace the ancestry of Jesus through the Bible, why can't Jews today?

Discussion: They can if they read and accept the New Testament accounts written by Christian believers. However, Jesus' lineage is not in dispute so much as whether He's the long-awaited Messiah. Many Jews believe He had the powers and calling of a prophet, but the Crucifixion blinded them from seeing Jesus as their Savior. Such books as the Gospel of Matthew or the Epistle to the Hebrews may help people with a Hebrew heritage to recognize Jesus as the sinless Lamb of God who gave Himself as the supreme sacrifice for sin. (To learn more about the sacrifices God prescribed and described to Moses many centuries before Christ, check out the book of Leviticus.)

Jesus' death was also foreshadowed by the unblemished lamb slain for Passover. Exodus 12 gives the full story, but in brief, the Angel of Death passed over every house in Egypt that the Hebrew people (and others who believed in God) had obediently marked with the blood of a lamb. After that life-saving experience, Moses led the descendants of the Twelve Tribes of Israel out of bondage, which, by then, had lasted a few hundred years.

In addition to those redemptive acts, which are so key to Judaism, the resurrection of Jesus Christ resuscitated all believers into eternal life from the spiritual death that began in the Garden of Eden. Unmerited grace can be hard for anyone to accept, especially those who think the salvation of their souls depends solely on their adherence to the Law of Moses or on their own goodness.

Question: I thought the Bible talked a lot about the Twelve Tribes of Israel, but when I asked a Jewish friend which tribe his family belonged to, he didn't seem to know what I was talking about. How could that be?

Discussion: In a word, emphasis…. A longer explanation, however, might begin with the Messianic prophecy in Genesis 49:10, which states, "The scepter shall not depart from Judah, nor the ruler's staff from between his feet until he comes to whom it belongs; and to him shall be the obedience of the peoples" (Revised Standard Version). In keeping with that prophetic word, the Bible refers to this son of Israel and his tribe as a lion, which, symbolically at least, is the king of all creatures.

 Primarily, Genesis 49 records the blessings (and sometimes, cursing) Jacob (aka Israel) gave to each of his sons, but verses 8 through 12 show that Judah and his tribe received a special blessing and prophetic word. Over the centuries, this kingly line or Lion of Judah produced King David, King Solomon, and ultimately Jesus of whom verse 11 speaks prophetically: "He tethers his donkey to the vine, his purebred ass to the choicest stem. In wine he washes his garments, his robe in the blood of grapes" (NAB).

Obviously, Judah and his tribe received an extraordinary word from the beginning, so biblical writers carefully followed and recorded the Judaic line, not only in the Old Testament but also the New. For instance, Revelation 5:5 states, "Weep not; lo, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, the Root of David, has conquered, so that he can open the scroll and its seven seals." From Genesis to Revelation then, many generations of Bible writers kept track of Judah and his lineage with the result being almost 900 references included in Holy Scripture.

Since the Bible does not give other tribes this much emphasis, those lines of descent can be harder to follow. Also, many records were lost when the Jewish people were exiled from their homes and the Temple razed in the centuries before Christ. The OT books of Ezra and Nehemiah recount how the peoples eventually returned to rebuild Jerusalem, but by then they had intermarried with other tribes and cultures, further tangling the lines. 

Most importantly though, a person's lineage no longer mattered once the birth of Christ had been recorded. Because of his life, death, and resurrection, all believers from all tribes, races, cultures, and ancestries could be "adopted" into His family, which makes us, as Christians, part of the kingly Tribe of Judah. For those of Jewish extraction who do not accept this royal inheritance, an in-depth search for ancestral roots can become problematic since the destruction of the Jerusalem Temple in 70 A. D. also destroyed the central place for keeping tribal records. However, earlier information had been recorded on the Twelve Tribes of Israel, so we can talk about those references a little more — next time.

Comments

  1. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    it is sad that the jews do not accept Jesus Christ as the Son of God.

    we need to pray for their conversion, because unless they come into the catholic church, they will go to hell.

     

    Pope Eugene IV, Council of Florence, Sess. 8, Nov. 22, 1439, ex cathedra: Whoever wishes to be saved, needs above all to hold the Catholic faith; unless each one preserves this whole and inviolate, he will without a doubt perish in eternity.– But the Catholic faith is this, that we worship one God in the Trinity, and the Trinity in unity; neither confounding the persons, nor dividing the substance; for there is one person of the Father, another of the Son, another of the Holy Spirit, their glory is equal, their majesty coeternal…and in this Trinity there is nothing first or later, nothing greater or less, but all three persons are coeternal and coequal with one another, so that in every respect, as has already been said above, both unity in Trinity, and Trinity in unity must be worshipped.  Therefore let him who wishes to be saved, think thus concerning the Trinity.     “But it is necessary for eternal salvation that he faithfully believe also in the incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ…the Son of God is God and man… unless each one believes this faithfully and firmly, he cannot be saved.”

  2. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    I cannot find a record of Eugene IV speaking ex cathedra on this or any other subject.  He did issue a Papal Bull following the Council of Florence (Laethantur Coeli), but that was not ex cathedra.  Florence was called in the hopes of healing the Great Schism.  One of the dividing issues with the Greek church was the nature of the Holy Spirit. In your quote of Pope Eugene he was putting forth the Catholic position that there are three persons in the one God (the Greek church held that there are only two, and that the Holy Spirit was not a distinct person).  Florence tried to resolve that – and a couple less important differences.

    The Catholic Church does not teach that salvation is soley through the Catholic Church, realizing that Our Father is free to redeem in any manner that He wills.  Christ said that He was the only way to salvation, not that the Catholic Church was the only way.

    You might want to hold off for a while before dispatching the Jews to hell. Our Father offers salvation through the Jews, and since the plan for salvation is not yet complete, it follows that He is not finished with them just yet. Christ was a practising Jew and died on the cross practising Judiasm. The Apostles were practising Jews long after Pentecost. Christ returns to the Jews at His Second Coming – in Jerusalem – and the Nations worship Christ in Jerusalem.  We Gentiles are literally still standing on the sidelines watching the salvanic act play out between Our Father and the Jews. We might be wise to wait until that completes and leave it to Jesus Christ to decide then who goes where and when. 

  3. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Walter Brietzke

  4. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Both comments here are not entirely correct.

    !. First of all we have no right to judge who and who is not going to hell.

    3. All who are saved will be through the Catholic Church whether they believe  it or not. They just don't understand that. The Catholic church was started by Christ for that purpose.

    4. The Jewish people lost there position in salvation history when they rejected Jesus as saviour. They will be saved through the Church just like anyone else.

    Walter Brietzke

  5. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Everyone who is saved will be saved through the Catholic Church and indeed at the end of time will be a member of the Catholic Church.

    All the grace that comes into this world, comes by means of the Catholic altars where the eternal sacrifice is offered for the whole world, not just for visible members of the Church. Papal bull, your comments have been deleted before. You are close to being banned from this site.

    The Church does teach that salvation is only though the Church; that is not the same as teaching that only those who are members of the Church can be saved, otherwise there would be no sense to the prayers at Mass where we pray for all those who have died in God's friendship and whose faith was known only to Him.

    The Church is the New Israel of God. But that does not mean that there is not still some special position for the Jewish people as a people. There is some mystery about this that may not be revealed until the end. The Church is not dogmatic about it but rather probes and explores the mystery.

    In addition, this entire thread started by one-note Mr. Bull, is off-topic.  It ruins the discussion of the actual substance of the articles when people come in and use the mere mention of Jews in the Bible to push their tiresome little agenda.  It will no longer be tolerated.

Leave a Reply