By A. J. Gordon, D.
D.
PERHAPS there is no man
living whom the writer
had more earnestly
desired to meet face to
face than this Israelite
of the New Covenant.
Professor Delitzsch
wrote several pamphlets
and documents concerning
him, evidently regarding
him as possibly the most
remarkable Jewish
conversion to Christ
since that of Saul of
Tarsus. We have followed
with the profoundest
interest the reports of
his work in Russia since
his confession of Jesus
Christ as the Messiah;
and we have read with no
less interest his
sermons and addresses
which have appeared from
time to time in print.
Going to Chicago for a
month's service in
connection with Mr.
Moody's World's Fair
Evangelistic Campaign,
we found ourselves at
our lodgings placed in
the next room to a
Russian guest, whose
name was not yet told
us. Hearing in the
evening the strains of
subdued and fervent
Hebrew chanting, we
inquired who our
neighbor might be, and
learned that it was one
Joseph Rabinowitz, of
Russia; and thus, to our
surprise, we found
ourselves next neighbor
to one whom we would
have crossed the ocean
to see, with only a
sliding door between us
Introduction followed,
and then three weeks of
study and communion
together concerning the
things of the kingdom,
the memory of which will
not soon depart.
Before we detail the
story of our summer
Hebrew school at the
feet of this Christian
Gamaliel, let us repeat
the story of his
conversion as we have
read it, and now heard
it verified by himself.
Joseph Rabinowitz was a
lawyer residing in
Kischineff, Southern
Russia, a man of very
wide and commanding
influence among his
Hebrew brethren, as a
scholar, a
philanthropist and a
lover of his nation.
From a young man he had
been a most diligent and
painstaking student of
the Hebrew Scriptures,
of the Talmud, and of
all related Jewish
literature, so that at
the age of forty, he
says, "I was like a man
living in a house
furnished with every
article of furniture
which money could buy, and yet
the shutters of that
house closed and
curtains all drawn, so
that I was in the dark,
and knew not the meaning
of my own learning till
Jesus, the Light of the
World, came in and
illuminated all as in a
flash."
About ten years ago, Mr.
Rabinowitz was selected,
in connection with
certain colonization
efforts, to go to
Palestine to secure land
for Jewish emigrants who
desired to flee from
Russian persecution.
When fitting himself out
with guide-books for his
contemplated journey, he
was given a copy of the
New Testament with him,
as furnishing an
admirable directory to
the sacred places of
Jerusalem and the
vicinity. While walking
about Zion and gazing
upon its historic sites
he carried in his pocket
this yet unopened
treasure. Going one day
to the brow of the Mount
of Olives, he sat down
on that sacred hill and
began contemplating the
city as it lay at his
feet. Then came a train
of reflection and
questioning: "Why this
long desolation of the
City of David? Why this
scattering of my people
to the ends of the earth
? Why these fresh
persecutions breaking
forth against us in
almost every country of
Europe?" While he
pondered these sad
questions he gazed
toward the reputed
Calvary, where that holy
prophet of his nation
had been crucified. As
he did so, his eyes were
opened; he looked upon
Him whom his nation had
pierced. In a flash the
truth entered his heart:
"We have rejected our
Messiah! hence our long
casting off and
dispersion by Jehovah!
He believed; he cried
out to Jesus, " My Lord
and my God," and almost
as suddenly as Saul of
Tarsus, Joseph
Rabinowitz, from being a
Hebrew of the Hebrews,
has become an Israelite
of the New Covenant, a
disciple of Jesus of
Nazareth. He took out
his New Testament, a
guide-book in a sense
undreamed of, and read
the first passage that
fell under his eye: " I
am the vine, ye are the
branches. . . . Without
Me ye can do nothing."
"I saw it in the
twinkling of an eye,"
said he. "Our Jewish
bankers, with their
millions of gold, can do
nothing for us: our
scholars and statesmen,
with all their wisdom,
can do nothing for us;
our colonization
societies, with all
their influence and
capital, can do nothing
for us: our only hope is
in our brother, Jesus,
whom we crucified, and
whom God raised up and
at His own right hand.
'Without Him we can do
nothing.'"
We imagine the sensation
which was caused in
Russia when this
emigrant Hebrew returned
home and boldly
announced far and wide,
publicly in the
synagogue and openly in
the columns of the
press, his acceptance of
Jesus Christ as his
Saviour and Lord.
Persecution and obloquy
were poured upon him
from every quarter, and
they of his
own household became his
foes, but he had counted
the cost. He joyfully
and boldly maintained
his testimony, till
little by little the
enmity was softened. Now
he rejoices that one
after another of his own
family have joined him
in confessing Christ,
and preaching Him to
their neighbors. By permission of the
government, surprisingly
granted, he has built a
synagogue, where he
assembles a good
congregation to listen
to the Word of God from
his lips; and he says
that his entire time is
occupied from morning to
night, week in and week
out, in answering
letters from Jews who
are distressed in mind
concerning this great
question, and in meeting
inquirers coming
sometimes hundreds of
miles to talk with him
of Jesus of Nazareth.
What wonder that such a
conversion, attended
with such results,
should have led
Professor Delitzsch to
hail the event as the
"first ripe fig" on the
long barren tree of
rejected Israel, and as
a cheering sign that for
that people " summer is
nigh."
It seemed to us as we
talked with this
Israelite without guile
day after day, and heard
him pour out his soul in
prayer, that we never
witnessed such ardor of
affection for Jesus, and
such absorbing devotion
to His person and glory.
We shall not soon forget
the radiance that would
come into his face as he
expounded the Messianic
Psalms at our morning
and evening worship, and
how, as here and there
he caught a glimpse of
the suffering of the
glorified Christ, he
would suddenly lift his
hands and his eyes to
heaven, in a burst of
admiration, exclaiming
with Thomas, after he
had seen the nailprints,
"My Lord and my God!" So
saturated is he with the
letter as well as the
spirit of the Hebrew
Scriptures that, to hear
him talk, one might
imagine it was Isaiah or
some other prophet of
the old dispensation
that was speaking.
"What is your view of
inspiration?" we asked
him, in order to draw
him out on certain
much-mooted questions of
our time. "My view is,"
he said, holding up his
Hebrew Bible, "that this
is the Word of God; the
Spirit of God dwells in
it. When I read it I
know that God is
speaking to me; and when
I preach it I say to the
people, 'Be silent and
hear what Jehovah will
say to you.'" "As for
comparing the
inspiration of Scripture
with that of Homer or
Shakespeare," he
continued , "it is not a
question of degree but
of kind. Electricity
will pass through an
iron bar, but it will
not go through a rod of
glass, however beautiful
and transparent, because
it has no affinity for
it. So the Spirit of God
dwells in the Word of
God, the Holy
Scriptures, because
these are His proper
mediums, but not in
Homer or Shakespeare,
because
He has no affinity with
these writings." This
sentence gives an
instance of his
vividness of
illustration, of which
he is a natural master. Some of Mr. Rabinowitz's
expositions and
explanations of
Scripture were
exceedingly interesting.
"Show me a photograph of
Kischineff," he said one
day, "and I can tell
instantly whether it is
correct, for I have
lived there all my life.
So when I read the New
Testament, how vivid are
its pictures to one who
has lived for years in
Jewish history and
traditions!" Opening to
Revelation xvi., he
read, "Behold, I come as
a thief. Blessed is he
that watcheth and
keepeth his garments,
lest he walk naked and
they see his shame."
This admonition of the
Lord affected me very
deeply when I first read
it," he said, " for I
knew at a glance its
meaning. All night long
the watchmen in the
temple kept on duty. The
overseer of the temple
was always likely to
appear at unexpected
hours to see if these
were faithfully
attending to their
charges. If he came upon
any watchman who had
fallen asleep, he
quietly drew his loose
garments from him and
bore them away as a
witness against him when
he should wake. My Lord
is liable to come at any
moment. He may come in
the second watch or in
the third watch,
therefore I must be
always ready, lest
coming suddenly, he find
me sleeping, and I be
stripped of my garment."
"Do you know what
questioning and
controversies the Jews
have kept up over Zech.
xii: 10?" he asked one
day. "'They shall look
upon Me whom they have
pierced.' They will not
admit that it is Jehovah
whom they have pierced.
Hence the dispute about
the whom. But do you
notice that this word is
simply the first and
last letters of the
Hebrew Alphabet, Alev
Tav? Do you wonder then,
that I was filled with
awe and astonishment
when I opened to Rev. i
: 7, 8, and read these
words of Zechariah, now
quoted by John, 'Behold,
He cometh with clouds;
and every eye shall see
Him, and they also that
pierced Him;' and then
heard the glorified Lord
saying, 'I am the ALPHA
AND OMEGA!' Jesus seemed
to say to me, 1 Do you
doubt who it is whom you
pierced? I am the Aleph
and Tav, the Alpha and
Omega, Jehovah the
Almighty. '"
Rabinowitz is as clear
as is Paul in the
eleventh of Romans as to
the divine order and
plan for bringing the
nations to God. After
the present Gentile
election and
outgathering, he holds
that the Jews are to be
converted and restored
to God's favor in
connection with the
second advent of our
Lord, and that then will
follow worldwide
salvation and the
universal ingathering of
the Gentiles. He is very
positive, therefore, as
to the meaning of the
passage in the
fifteenth of Acts.
"Simeon hath declared
how God at the first did
visit the Gentiles, to
take out of them a
people for His name."
"That is what is going
on now," he 9ays.
"During Israel'9
rejection the elect
church is being
gathered." "After this I
will return and build
again the tabernacle of
David that is fallen
down," etc. "This is
very plainly the
conversion and
restoration of Israel,"
he says. And when I
urged that many
spiritualize the words
and apply them to the
Christian Church, he
replied, "It will not be
easy to make a Jew
believe that, when the
words in Amos, which are
here quoted, plainly
refer to the restoration
of Israel; and
especially since the
Jews have been praying
this prayer from time
immemorial, always
repeating it at the
yearly Feast of
Tabernacles: 'O Thou
Redeemer, prosper those
who seek Thee at all
times; raise up the
tabernacle of David that
is fallen, that it may
no longer be degraded.'" "After the tabernacle of
David shall be rebuilt,
and national Israel
saved, "he continues, 1'
then, and then only,
will come the times of
refreshing from the
presence of the Lord, in
which all nations will
be brought into
obedience and subjection
to Christ." Such is his
strong conviction, and
the reader may find that
he agrees with Peter in
Acts iii: 19, 20, and
with Paul in Rom. xi.
Indeed, this Hebrew
prophet is proclaiming
most solemnly the
impending advent of our
Lord. He contends that
without a clear
proclamation of the
second advent,
Christians have no
common ground on which
to meet the Jews; that
to spiritualize this
doctrine, as many do, is
fatal, since the
predictions are so clear
of a glorious and
conquering Messiah as
well as a suffering
Messiah. If you
spiritualize the second
advent, you must allow
the Jew to spiritualize
the first, as he is
always ready to do, and
you have no basis on
which to reason with
him. Nothing could be
more thrilling and
pathetic than to hear
this latter-day prophet
of Israel dilate on the
blessedness and glory of
his nation when it shall
at last be brought back
into favor and
fellowship with God.
''The Gentile nations
cannot come to their
highest blessing till
then," he says, "nor can
our rejected and
crucified Messiah see
the travail of His soul
and be satisfied until
His kinsmen according to
the flesh shall own and
accept Him." Then, with
dramatic fervor and
pathos impossible to
describe, he said the
following beautiful
thing: "Jesus, the
glorified Head of the
Church, is making up His
body now, my brother.
Think you that my nation
will have no place in
that body? Yes, the last
and most sacred place.
When from India's and
China's millions, and
from the innumerable
multitudes of Africa and
the islands
of the sea, the last
Gentile shall have been
brought in, and His body
made complete, there
will still be left a
place for little
Israel—she will fill up
the hole in His side,
that wound which can
never be closed till the
nation that made it is
saved." Many other sayings of
this remarkable man
might be quoted bad we
space to insert them. He
declares most
confidently that the
Spirit is moving on his
people as has not been
the case since the
dispersion. He is full
of joy at the prospect
of their speedy turning
to the Lord.
Emphatically he preaches
that there is no hope
but in the crucified
Messiah. He must be
received; His blood
must cleanse; His mercy
must be gained before
the Jewish nation can
ever have rest. In one
of his sermons he
compares Israel to a
little ship which has
witnessed the wreck of
many a proud
craft—Assyria, Babylon,
Greece and Rome—while
this is the one nation
that is never to perish,
because of the
unchanging covenant of
Jehovah. He says:
"Centuries ago it was
wrecked, and broken were
its masts, but up to the
present day it sails
among modern nations—a
strange, weird-like
ship. Its mariners are
often in despair when
the waves seem to
swallow up their fragile
vessel; many from among
Israel seem to join
other ships, and find a
home there, and try to
partake of the treasures
of culture and modern
development that adorn
them. But soon the men
of other nations rise
against the mysterious
strangers from the old
Oriental ship, and, not
willing to tolerate
them, fling them back
into the waves, so that
with difficulty and
trepidation they return
to the old wreck, on
which the tears of their
fathers have fallen
abundantly. The storm
rages, the clouds are
dark, the hearts of the
mariners fail them; they
cry out, 'Lord, save us,
we perish! But the hour
is coming when He who
long ago rose in the
little ship on the Sea
of Galilee shall rise in
the midst of" them; He
shall rebuke the winds
and the waves—it will
become perfectly still,
and some shall sink down
before His feet with the
cry of Thomas, 'My Lord
and my God!' and
immediately Israel will
be in the haven of rest,
which remaineth for the
chosen people of God."
It would not be possible
to put on paper
Rabinowitz's fervid and
dramatic exposition of
Christ's farewell to the
temple: "Behold, your
house is left unto you
desolate; and verily I
say unto you, Ye shall
not see Me until the
time comes when you
shall say, Blessed is He
that cometh in the name
of the Lord!" He
pictured a Jew sitting
in the door of his
lonely house in the
evening. Suddenly he
catches a sight of a
beloved and long
separated friend
approaching. He rises up
and shouts out his
salutation to him:
"Blessed is he that
cometh in the name of
the Lord." So shall
Israel do when the
spirit of grace and of
supplication has been
poured upon them; and
they shall see Him whom
they pierced coming to
them. As they once
cried, "Crucify Him!
crucify Him!" now the
cry, "Blessed is He that
cometh in the name of
the Lord!" So when, on parting, I
asked for his autograph,
he wrote this in Hebrew
as his farewell word: "
Blessed is He that
cometh in the name of
the Lord." |