excerpted from The Case for Christ by Lee Strobel, copyright (C) 1998 by Lee Strobel. Used by permission of Zondervan.
Was the baby in the manger really the Christ? Did he miraculously fulfill these predictions that were written hundreds of years before he was born? And how do we know he was the only individual born throughout history who fit the prophetic fingerprint?
There are plenty of scholars I could have asked about this topic. However, I wanted to interview someone for whom this was more than just an abstract academic exercise, and that took me to a very unlikely setting in southern California.
INTERVIEW: LOUIS S. LAPIDES, MDIV, THM
Usually a church would be a natural location in which to question someone about a biblical issue. But there was something different about sitting down with Pastor Louis Lapides in the sanctuary of his congregation the morning after Sunday worship services. This setting of pews and stained glass was not where you’d expect to find a nice Jewish boy from Newark, New Jersey.
Yet that’s Lapides’ background. For someone with his heritage, the question of whether Jesus is the long-anticipated Messiah goes beyond theory. It’s intensely personal, and I had sought out Lapides so I could hear the story of his own investigation of this critical issue.
Lapides earned a bachelor’s degree in theology from Dallas Baptist University, as well as a master of divinity and a master of theology degree in Old Testament and Semitics from Talbot Theological Seminary.
He served for a decade with Chosen People Ministries, talking about Jesus to Jewish college students. He has taught in the Bible department of Biola University and is the former president of a national network of fifteen messianic congregations.
Slender and bespectacled, Lapides is soft-spoken but has a quick smile and a ready laugh. He was upbeat and polite as he ushered me to a chair near the front of Beth Ariel Fellowship in Sherman Oaks, California. I didn’t want to begin by debating biblical nuances; instead I started by inviting Lapides to tell me the story of his spiritual journey.
Lapides came from a Jewish family, attending a conservative Jewish synagogue in preparation for bar mitzvah, but his family did not strictly observe the Jewish traditions. He had never been taught about the Messiah; in fact, Lapides said it was never even discussed. “My impressions of Jesus came from seeing Catholic churches…I never thought Jesus had any connection to the Jewish people. I just thought he was a god of the Gentiles. …When the New Testament was first presented to me, I sincerely thought it was going to basically be a handbook on anti-Semitism: how to hate Jews, how to kill Jews, how to massacre them. I thought the American Nazi Party would have been very comfortable using it as a guidebook.” I shook my head, saddened at the thought of how many other Jewish children have grown up thinking of Christians as their enemies.
Lapides said several incidents dimmed his allegiance to Judaism as he was growing up. His parents’ divorce when he was seventeen made him wonder where God came in, why they didn’t go to a rabbi for counseling, and what good is religion if it can’t help people in a practical way.
“On top of that, in Judaism, I didn’t feel as if I had a personal relationship with God. I had a lot of beautiful ceremonies and traditions, but he was the distant and detached God of Mount Sinai who said, ‘Here are the rules—you live by them, you’ll be okay; I’ll see you later.’ And there I was, an adolescent with raging hormones, wondering, Does God relate to my struggles? Does he care about me as an individual?”
Continued ...next post
Was the baby in the manger really the Christ? Did he miraculously fulfill these predictions that were written hundreds of years before he was born? And how do we know he was the only individual born throughout history who fit the prophetic fingerprint?
There are plenty of scholars I could have asked about this topic. However, I wanted to interview someone for whom this was more than just an abstract academic exercise, and that took me to a very unlikely setting in southern California.
INTERVIEW: LOUIS S. LAPIDES, MDIV, THM
Usually a church would be a natural location in which to question someone about a biblical issue. But there was something different about sitting down with Pastor Louis Lapides in the sanctuary of his congregation the morning after Sunday worship services. This setting of pews and stained glass was not where you’d expect to find a nice Jewish boy from Newark, New Jersey.
Yet that’s Lapides’ background. For someone with his heritage, the question of whether Jesus is the long-anticipated Messiah goes beyond theory. It’s intensely personal, and I had sought out Lapides so I could hear the story of his own investigation of this critical issue.
Lapides earned a bachelor’s degree in theology from Dallas Baptist University, as well as a master of divinity and a master of theology degree in Old Testament and Semitics from Talbot Theological Seminary.
He served for a decade with Chosen People Ministries, talking about Jesus to Jewish college students. He has taught in the Bible department of Biola University and is the former president of a national network of fifteen messianic congregations.
Slender and bespectacled, Lapides is soft-spoken but has a quick smile and a ready laugh. He was upbeat and polite as he ushered me to a chair near the front of Beth Ariel Fellowship in Sherman Oaks, California. I didn’t want to begin by debating biblical nuances; instead I started by inviting Lapides to tell me the story of his spiritual journey.
Lapides came from a Jewish family, attending a conservative Jewish synagogue in preparation for bar mitzvah, but his family did not strictly observe the Jewish traditions. He had never been taught about the Messiah; in fact, Lapides said it was never even discussed. “My impressions of Jesus came from seeing Catholic churches…I never thought Jesus had any connection to the Jewish people. I just thought he was a god of the Gentiles. …When the New Testament was first presented to me, I sincerely thought it was going to basically be a handbook on anti-Semitism: how to hate Jews, how to kill Jews, how to massacre them. I thought the American Nazi Party would have been very comfortable using it as a guidebook.” I shook my head, saddened at the thought of how many other Jewish children have grown up thinking of Christians as their enemies.
Lapides said several incidents dimmed his allegiance to Judaism as he was growing up. His parents’ divorce when he was seventeen made him wonder where God came in, why they didn’t go to a rabbi for counseling, and what good is religion if it can’t help people in a practical way.
“On top of that, in Judaism, I didn’t feel as if I had a personal relationship with God. I had a lot of beautiful ceremonies and traditions, but he was the distant and detached God of Mount Sinai who said, ‘Here are the rules—you live by them, you’ll be okay; I’ll see you later.’ And there I was, an adolescent with raging hormones, wondering, Does God relate to my struggles? Does he care about me as an individual?”
Continued ...next post
Last edited: