Too many Hebrew Roots people on social media like to hit people with sound bytes, often with very little theological engagement, as much an intention at shock value.
Hebrew Roots Movement
The Hebrew Roots movement frequently rejects the mainstream Jewish calendar, but cannot agree on which alternative should be followed.
The Hebrew Roots movement has a growing reputation for being overly negative, critical, and hostile to the good things brought to us by the Jewish Synagogue and Christian Church.
The motives of far too many people, across both the Messianic movement and Hebrew Roots, is so that they can have some kind of “edge” via knowledge or information that only “they” know.
The Hebrew Roots movement is vast, but there tends to be three types of people you will encounter: the lost cause, the offended, the one close to but far enough away from Messianic Judaism.
Within the broad Messianic sphere of influence, one will rightly see an emphasis on how God’s people need to return to a Torah foundation. But there are indeed those who imply that the Torah or Law of Moses is more important than the Eternal God who gave it.
How many people across the Messianic and Hebrew Roots spectrum agree on the post-resurrection era validity of Moses’ Teaching—but then (strongly) disagree on how it should be implemented for Messiah’s followers?
What are some of the things that we have to reckon with, which saw interest in either the Messianic movement or Hebrew Roots grow—which are now turning out to be of little substantial value in light of present challenges?
John McKee evaluates some of the serious challenges that exist when the term “pagan” is…
Are Christian people who do not keep Torah hopelessly lost? I notice that your ministry freely, and sometimes liberally, quotes Christian Bible scholars. There are a great number of people in the Hebrew Roots movement who think that they have a corner on the “truth,” and that everyone else is in error.