The Last Adam

For as through one man’s disobedience the many were made sinners, even so through the obedience of the one many will be made righteous.  Romans 5:19  NASB

The one – Who is the last Adam?  Christians are quick to answer, “Jesus.”  But Jewish followers of YHWH have provided a different answer for the last 2000 years; an answer that most Christians and Messianic believers simply don’t understand or appreciate.  Once we realize that our Jewish brothers and sisters have another answer to this question, an answer that is perfectly legitimate within Judaism, we gain two very important insights.

The first insight is the realization that Paul offers a theological shift within the Jewish rabbinic perspective, not a radical break.  The groundwork for a “last Adam” theology was already in place.  All Paul had to do was point in a slightly different direction.

The second insight is that contemporary orthodox Judaism still retains the fundamental framework for a “last Adam” theology that could follow Paul’s direction.  In other words, if it were not for the additional baggage added by the Church’s dismissal of Torah, Jews today might easily follow Paul’s rabbinic thought in Romans Chapter 5.  It’s all there, waiting to be revealed by moving from one exegetical scheme to another.

Notice what Neusner says about this “last Adam” idea.  “Israel is like Adam, but Israel is the other, the last Adam, comparable to but ultimately the opposite of the first Adam: God’s final solution to the Adam problem. . . . For Judaism, what is important is how sages explicitly compare Adam and Israel, the first man and the last, and show how the story of Adam matches the story of Israel – but with a difference not to be missed.”[1]

Did you catch the connection rabbinic Judaism provides?  The first Adam was that man in the Garden who disobeyed YHWH’s command.  As a result, human progeny were propelled into a world dominated by the unrestrained yetzer ha’ra.  Then came God’s selection of Israel!  Because the sages adopted an exegetical method that employed typology and allegory, they looked at Israel as the last Adam.  Israel, God’s chosen people, became the substitute Adam.  Israel ushered in the possibility of obedience that reconciled the error made by the first Adam.  Because the sages saw the divinely-chosen nation as God’s answer to a lost world, they offered a different answer to the problem of the Fall.  Within rabbinic thought, that answer was legitimate.  The problem with the answer is not the formula “last Adam = Israel.”  The problem is the exegetical method that produces the formula.

When Paul offers a different formula (“last Adam = Yeshua”) he is still working within the framework of rabbinic theology.  He is still trying to solve the fall-death problem.  But his exegetical method is based on historical event, not on allegory and type.  Therefore, he points in a different direction.  He points to the actual man, Yeshua, as the solution rather than to a typology found in the idea of Israel.  Paul certainly was familiar with the exegesis of typology.  He uses it himself.  But on this crucial issue, he anchors his claim in the historical record.  If Yeshua didn’t live and die and rise again as the Messiah, then Paul’s claim is bogus.  Paul recognizes that even the idea of Israel can’t really solve this problem because the people of Israel have not been perfectly obedient.  They still need an advocate on Yom Kippur.  The high priest can’t atone for his own sins and neither can the nation.  God Himself must solve this problem and God does so with a man, the Messiah, not with a type.

What does this mean for us?  First, we learn that Paul is much more of a rabbi than we commonly believe.  Even in his view of Yeshua as mediator, he does not step out of the rabbinic framework.  He merely offers another solution.  Secondly, we learn that if we are going to interact with our Jewish compatriots today, we must become sensitive to the exegetical methods they have used for 2400 years; methods that produce the answers they embrace today.  If we are going to talk about Yeshua as the Messiah, we better understand how they would view the same original material.  And finally, we realize that we too have presuppositions that guide our exegesis.  If we don’t know why we believe what we believe, if we don’t understand how our paradigms shape the reading to the text, then we are in no better position than those rabbis who rejected Paul’s other direction.  If unity is our goal, the goal that Paul expressed over and over, we have a lot to learn, don’t we?

Topical Index:  Adam, last Adam, Judaism, Neusner, Romans 5:19

 


[1] Jacob Neusner, Judaism When Christianity Began, p. 57

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carl roberts

(Israel), Behold, the Lamb..

~ And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning Himself ~

~ For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that this Adam, this Man, the Anointed ONE, the Messiah, the Christ, the LORD Yeshua died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that He was buried, that He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that He appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. After that, He appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers at the same time, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep. Then He appeared to James, then to all the apostles, Last of all, as though I had been born at the wrong time, I also saw Him. For I am the least of the apostles and do not even deserve to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of G-d ~

~ But by the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace toward me was not in vain. On the contrary, I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of G-d that is with me ~

~ For by grace you have been saved through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God; Not by works, lest any man should boast ~

~ For we are His workmanship, created in Yeshua HaMashiach to good works, which G-d has before ordained that we should walk in them ~

~ Who is this King of glory? ~

Who is this King of glory that pursues me with His love?
And haunts me with each hearing of His softly spoken words?

My conscience, a reminder of forgiveness that I need

-Who is this King of glory who offers it to me?

Who is this King of angels?, – O blessed Prince of Peace
Revealing things of Heaven and all its mysteries?

My spirit’s ever longing for His grace in which to stand
Who is this King of glory, -Son of G-d and son of man?

carl roberts

~ The nations will know…when, before their eyes, I am set apart through you to be regarded as holy ~(Ezekiel 36:23).

Israel- who was, and is, and is to come.

(One who prevails with God or Let God prevail)

Israel: a person – both physical and spiritual
Israel: a people of God – both physical and spiritual
Israel: a place – both physical and spiritual
Israel: a possession – both physical and spiritual
Israel: a portrait of God – both physical and spiritual
Israel: a promise – both physical and spiritual
Israel: a prophecy – both physical and spiritual
Israel: a paradox – both physical and spiritual
Israel: a paradigm – both physical and spiritual
Israel: the purpose of God – both physical and spiritual
Israel: the pattern of God – both physical and spiritual
Israel: the passion of God – both physical and spiritual
Israel: the parable of God – both physical and spiritual

The nations will know…when, before their eyes, I am set apart through you to be regarded as holy (Ezekiel 36:23).

Israel is God’s picture book, teaching the world that He exists and is supreme over all he has created. Israel is also God’s picture book, graphically displaying his purpose for all mankind. God invites anyone to open this book and understand his ways.
We learn from the portrait of Israel that God is a just and righteous God who wants us to order society according to his Torah. If we do, there will be blessing; if not, there will be a curse. The picture book of Israel also teaches us about sowing and reaping, righteous courts, and accountable leaders. In the days of King David and during the early reign of King Shlomo (Solomon), we see a glorious foreshadowing of God’s ultimate Kingdom on earth.
The nation of Israel also provides a picture of God’s long-suffering love. Centuries pass and Israel is faithfully restored to her Land in fulfillment of prophecy. Israel’s feasts are pictures too. Passover is a picture of God’s deliverance.
Israel is not God’s only picture book. We are also a picture book. The Scriptures call this being a “witness.” What kind of a picture book are we?

2 Corinthians 2.3 Ye are our epistle written in our hearts, known and read of all men:

today I will…be a true witness, a picture of God’s grace and righteousness.

a person
Then the man said, “Your name will no longer be Jacob, but Israel because you have struggled with
God and with men and have overcome.” NIV Genesis 32:28

a people
Deuteronomy 21:8 Be merciful, O LORD, unto thy people Israel, whom thou hast redeemed,

a place Aliyah (Hebrew: עלייה, “ascent” or “going up”) is Jewish immigration to the Land of Israel
Aliyah means “ascent.” To migrate to Israel — to make aliyah
means to come from a low place and to “go up.”
(from the miry clay to a rock)
You are to come to the place where ADONAI your God will put His name….which is where
He will live (Deuteronomy 12:5).

a possession Genesis 13:15 For all the land which thou seest, to thee will I give it, and to thy
seed for ever.
a prophecy Deuteronomy 30.3 That then the LORD thy God will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon thee, and will return and gather thee from all the nations, whither the LORD thy God hath scattered thee.

Israel- a region
a race
a religion
a relationship
a reality physical, geographical,political,spiritual

a man
a miracle
a message

God always has a way of escape, so that his covenant people may endure.

Dorothy

That was/is breathtaking!

Pam

AMEIN!

robert lafoy

to fullfill the scripture, “I called my son out of egypt”

Who did He call out of Egypt? Israel or Messiah? or both!!

Yeshua IS Israel, the sages were correct.

Ester

” If we don’t know why we believe what we believe, if we don’t understand how our paradigms shape the reading to the text, then we are in no better position than those rabbis who rejected Paul’s other direction. If unity is our goal, the goal that Paul expressed over and over, we have a lot to learn, don’t we?”
Indeed, we have much to learn and much to un-learn before unity of both Spirit and truth that we so desire can come forth.