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Revision as of 01:56, 16 February 2003 editStephen C. Carlson (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users1,554 edits npoving and removal of bad info. For example, their own website indicates that many members of JfJ are non-Jews!← Previous edit Revision as of 03:24, 7 April 2003 edit undo129.2.195.147 (talk) indistiguishable --> indistinguishableNext edit →
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According to its Executive Director, Jews for Jesus has many non-Jews in administrative and staff positions but deploys "only front-line missionaries who are Jewish or married to Jews." However, some of the missionaries identify themselves as Jewish when in fact only their spouse, father, or grandfather is Jewish, so many of their missionaries would not be considered Jews in the communities they evangelize. According to its Executive Director, Jews for Jesus has many non-Jews in administrative and staff positions but deploys "only front-line missionaries who are Jewish or married to Jews." However, some of the missionaries identify themselves as Jewish when in fact only their spouse, father, or grandfather is Jewish, so many of their missionaries would not be considered Jews in the communities they evangelize.


Jews for Jesus is rejected as un-Jewish by Orthodox, Conversative, Reform, and Reconstructionist ] and even by other messianic Jewish groups. Its critics charge that Jews for Jesus is Jewish in name only due to the organization's lack of Torah observance and a statement of faith indistiguishable from those of other Evangelical para-church groups. Jews for Jesus is rejected as un-Jewish by Orthodox, Conversative, Reform, and Reconstructionist ] and even by other messianic Jewish groups. Its critics charge that Jews for Jesus is Jewish in name only due to the organization's lack of Torah observance and a statement of faith indistinguishable from those of other Evangelical para-church groups.


See also: See also:

Revision as of 03:24, 7 April 2003

Jews for Jesus is an Evangelical Protestant organization founded in 1973 by Moishe Rosen with a goal of converting Jews to a belief in Christianity. It is a well-known form of "messianic Judaism".

Their official mission statement is "to make the messiahship of Jesus an unavoidable issue to our Jewish people worldwide," and the organization claims to be "one of the most extensive evangelistic outreaches to Jewish people in the world today." They have also sent their members to the Ukraine and Russia.

According to its Executive Director, Jews for Jesus has many non-Jews in administrative and staff positions but deploys "only front-line missionaries who are Jewish or married to Jews." However, some of the missionaries identify themselves as Jewish when in fact only their spouse, father, or grandfather is Jewish, so many of their missionaries would not be considered Jews in the communities they evangelize.

Jews for Jesus is rejected as un-Jewish by Orthodox, Conversative, Reform, and Reconstructionist Judaism and even by other messianic Jewish groups. Its critics charge that Jews for Jesus is Jewish in name only due to the organization's lack of Torah observance and a statement of faith indistinguishable from those of other Evangelical para-church groups.

See also:

External links