Opening — I Want to Talk About the Messiah
I want to talk about the Messiah.
Not only about what books say about him, but about the road that led me to search for him and the moment when all the pieces seemed to fall into place.
Why I Began to Search
I returned to Jewish observance at the age of twenty-seven. I began studying Kabbalah and Hasidic thought and became close to a very special rabbi, whom I will not name here. I learned from him for years. His teaching was fascinating, his way of thinking original, and he opened doors for me that I had never known.
At one point I thought that perhaps he was the figure I had been looking for. Later I left, when I came to understand that he was probably not the Messiah. But the question did not leave me.
Who is the Messiah? What are we actually looking for? Is he a great rabbi, a hidden saint, a prophet, a king, or a man who is supposed to fall from heaven one day? And why had so many dates associated with the Messiah’s coming apparently passed without his arrival?
What Is a Messiah?
The Messiah is first of all a human being. A king of flesh and blood who carries the people of Israel, fights its wars, and leads it from where it stands to where it is meant to be.
When Israel asked for a king, they did not ask for a man who would sit in the study hall and give them a lesson. They said:
“Our king shall judge us, go out before us, and fight our battles.”
— I Samuel 8:20
The sages of Israel, the priests, and the tribe of Levi bear a spiritual role. The king bears another role. He carries the national body: the land, the army, the economy, the borders, the honor, and the security of Israel. He must act in the place where blood is shed and decisions are made, not only where ideas are studied.
A Word to the Christian Reader
A Christian reader who hears the word “Messiah” immediately thinks of Jesus. I understand that. But this book begins with the Hebrew Bible and the Jewish tradition. When I say Messiah, I mean a human king who carries Israel and acts within history.
After we learn from the earlier redeemers what that role actually is, I will devote a chapter to the obvious question: Does Jesus fit this pattern? I will examine him by the same standards used to examine Moses, Joseph, David, and Mordechai.
The Body of Redemption
This was the great change in my thinking. I understood that redemption is not only a story of the soul. It needs a body.
For two thousand years of exile, Israel preserved its soul in synagogues and houses of study. When it returned to the land, it also had to rebuild a body: a state, an army, agriculture, an economy, science, and government. This body is not less holy because it is made of budgets, metal, soldiers, and officials. Without a body, the soul cannot act in the world.
Then I understood why the man carrying the messianic role might not look like a rabbi. In our minds, a rabbi represents the soul of the people. A king carries its body. This does not mean Torah is unimportant, or that the Messiah must look secular. It means I had searched only on the spiritual side while his primary role was unfolding within the body of the nation.
The moment that thought struck me, I looked at Benjamin Netanyahu—and suddenly things connected.
Here was the man who had carried the State of Israel on his back for decades. The man who had placed his body in danger for it, whose name was known throughout the world, whose greatness the nations could see, whom Israel’s elites fought, and whom millions of Jews returned to leadership again and again. I looked back at the years in which people said the Messiah would come and no one saw him arrive, and another possibility rose before me: perhaps he had been here. Perhaps he had governed Israel during those very years, and no one noticed because everyone was looking for another kind of man.
From that moment the evidence kept accumulating. Midrashim I had not understood took on meaning. The stories of Moses, Joseph, David, and Mordechai looked different. I began speaking about it wherever I could—with family, with friends, on Facebook, and in lectures. For years I felt like someone crying, “The king is naked,” while people heard the words but did not look.
I do not know why God placed it on my heart, of all people, to see this. Nor can I force history to agree with me. Time will tell whether I was right or wrong. But after years of speaking about it, I decided it was time to place the argument in writing, clearly and in order.
My Grandmother and the Miracle We Failed to See
Years after I returned to observance, I was driving with my grandmother, may she live and be well. My phone lay in front of us, and Waze told me where to turn. She looked at it, laughed, and said something simple: less than a hundred years ago, if people had seen a little piece of metal talking to you, knowing where you were, and scolding you when you missed a turn, they would have called it the work of demons.
At that moment I understood another piece.
We are used to thinking of a miracle as a break in the laws of nature. The sea splits, fire descends from heaven, a staff becomes a snake. If something passes through a laboratory, a factory, an army, an airplane, or a computer, we call it nature. Yet a person from a century ago would faint at the sight of our lives. We speak to someone on the other side of the world through a piece of metal, cross continents in an iron box in the sky, see organs inside the body without opening it, and talk to a machine in human language.
We became accustomed to wonder, and so we stopped seeing it.
The same thing happened with redemption. We waited for a man to emerge from the picture we had drawn, and failed to look at the man already acting inside history. So I decided to set imagination aside for a moment and examine the messianic figures who had already lived: what they looked like in real time, before they became portraits of saints, while they were still being pursued, suspected, and disputed.
That is where this book begins.
My starting point is simple: “That which has been is that which shall be; and that which has been done is that which shall be done; there is nothing new under the sun.” I do not draw a future Messiah from imagination. I seek to recognize him through the redeemers whom God has already raised for Israel.