HOMENJE A DWIGHT PRYOR

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    http://www.jcstudies.com/about.cfm

    IN MEMORY OF GREAT SCHOOLAR OF HEBREW ROOTS

    SHALOM IN THE OLAM.

    Dwight's Credentials

    Dwight A. Pryor is the Founder and President of the Center for Judaic-Christian Studies

    in Dayton, Ohio. He is also a founding board member of the Jerusalem School ofSynoptic Research in Israel. While studying in Israel, he came to realize the critical

    importance of understanding Christianity's Hebraic origins and dimensions.

    Since 1984, he has traveled the world as one of the most widely acclaimed teachers on

    the subject.

    Dr. Pryor's academic credentials include a Bachelor of Arts degree, with SpecialDistinction, in Philosophy from the University of Oklahoma, extensive postgraduate

    studies in Philosophy and Judaism from the University of Texas, and a Doctor of Divinity

    degree from the Centre for the Study of Biblical Research.

    The Calling of JC Studies

    We have a passion born of the Spirit, we believe to proclaim and explain certain

    vital but imperiled truths to the Body of Messiah and especially to believers that arerecapturing their Hebrew heritage in Yeshua.

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    Dwight A. Pryor ... an interview

    Author: Dwight A. Pryor

    Q: How did you first get involved with the Jewish Roots of Christianity?

    A: My journey actually began with a small ad in the back of a Christian magazine in1981 that led me to a discovery of the Jewish background to the life and teachings of

    Jesus.

    A few years earlier, in 1977, the Lord had sovereignly brought me out of the New AgeMovement into the Kingdom of God. For seven years I had served as the President of a

    nationally known New Age organization when, with many of my colleagues and friends,

    I encountered the extraordinary reality of Jesus as Messiah and Lord and the power of the

    Holy Spirit to radically transform lives and bring people into an intimate relationship

    with the true and living God.

    As a result of that experience, I developed a keen interest in the Bible and its wisdom. I

    was influenced in my early studies by the writings of Derek Prince and developed a

    growing respect for the importance of Israel. Indeed I found myself drawn to the HebrewBible and surprisingly attracted to the Hebrew language.

    In the spring of 1981 I noticed a small ad in the classifieds of Logos magazine that posed

    a provocative question: Can the sayings of Jesus be properly understood without a

    knowledge of Hebrew? Readers were invited to request free information from Israel about

    exciting developments there in gospel research. Which I did . . . and the rest of the story,

    as they say, is history!

    Q: Who placed the ad, and what information did you receive?

    A: I received a packet of information from David Bivin telling about the unprecedentedcollaboration of Jewish and Christian scholars in Jerusalem studying the synoptic gospels

    of Matthew, Mark and Luke, and their growing conviction that Jesus of Nazareth likely

    spoke Hebrew in his religious discourses. More importantly, in their excavation of thegospels, Dr. Robert Lindsey and Professor David Flusser discovered mounting evidence

    that Jesus original words, idioms and Hebrew syntax are remarkably well preserved

    behind the earliest Greek manuscripts of the gospels.

    Later, through a generous gift of a dear friend, I was able to travel to Israel on a studytour and meet David and many of the scholars of what became known as the Jerusalem

    School. I was captivated by the brilliant insights their research shed on the life and times

    of Messiah Jesus, and felt strongly that the Body of Messiah worldwide should share inthe fruit of this pioneering work, and not just a coterie of a few gifted men and women in

    Jerusalem.

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    That journey up to Jerusalem forever changed my life and chartered the course for what

    would become my ministry. I went to Israel as a Spirit-filled believer, and I returned with

    a burning desire to become an authentic disciple of the historical Jesus of Nazareth. Iwent back to graduate school at the University of Texas, where I had attended more than

    a decade before as a Philosophy student, and took courses in modern Hebrew and Jewish

    studies. With the help of several friends, I started the Center for Judaic-Christian Studiesin order to raise funds to further gospel research in Israel and to share those results with

    others. Since its inception in 1984, I have served as the Center's president.

    Q: You must have seen many changes in the last 25 years in public awareness regardingthe Jewishness of Jesus and the Jewish roots of the Christian faith?

    A: In the 80s I could say to a church congregation that Jesus wasn't a Christian, he was aJew! and there would be gasps in the audience. Today everyone acknowledges that our

    Lord was not an Englishman but a devout Jew. Back then few people had ever heard the

    terminology Jewish roots of Christianity. Today you can do a Google search on the term

    and be directed to over 200,000 websites.

    So yes, there has been a noticeable awakening in the Church, even worldwide, to its

    historic and spiritual origins in the Judaism of Jesus and the Second Temple era in Jewish

    history. But I am not really surprised by this. From the beginning I had the sense that wewere witnessing more than some idiosyncratic curiosity of a few Hebrew-philes, but a

    move of God's Spirit that would eventually spread throughout the Body of Messiah.

    In the mid-80's, when I was trying to convince Eerdmans to publish the book Dr. Marvin

    Wilson had written for us, Our Father Abraham, I told them this work would not be justanother typical academic volume, with a short lifespan, but would circulate for years and

    become a classic in the Church's awakening to it Hebrew heritage in Messiah. Thoughthey were reluctant they did not think there was a market for the book they finally agreedto publish it (after we agreed to purchase 1000 copies in advance!). Today Our Father

    Abraham is in its thirteenth printing and is one of the five all-time bestselling academic

    books for the second largest Christian publishing house in America!

    Q: Are you pleased with the way this movement has developed over the years? And what

    do you see to be its future?

    A: Many positive and edifying things are occurring for believers returning to the

    foundations of their faith in a Jewish Messiah and his Hebrew scriptures. Minds are being

    renewed in the service of God, hearts are being mended, and families are finding blessingand shalom in celebrating the biblical holidays, including the Sabbath. I especially am

    thrilled with the fact that we now are witnessing the third generation of young scholars

    fully acquainted with and academically prepared to advance the Church's knowledge ofthe thorough-going Jewishness of Jesus and to promote the value of a Hebraic worldview

    to the Christian vision.

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    On the other hand, at times I have mixed feelings about the directions some in the so-

    called Jewish Roots Movement are taking. It is not surprising I suppose that with any

    move of God's Spirit in the Church there will be excesses and even extremism that canlead to spiritual pride, soulishness, and sectarianism. Too many who are leaders, it seems,

    have little scholarly background or accountability, and sometimes their new revelations

    are nothing more than retooled ancient heresies garbed in Hebrew clothing. That does notcontribute to the renewing of the Christian mind nor to the sanctifying of God's name.

    My strong conviction is that the Lord is restoring the Hebraic foundations of the Church

    so that together we all can move forward in greater faithfulness and maturity in the

    service of the Messiah and the Kingdom of God. Toward that end we should be Father-focused, Christ-centered and Spirit-saturated. We should stand with and pray for Israel.

    Our teaching should strive to be biblically balanced and theologically sound.

    Of all the followers of Jesus, we who are being reconnected to the olive-tree roots of our

    faith, who study Torah and treasure Jewish wisdom surely we should be the most humble

    and wise, with a servant heart and a good eye, like Abraham, our father in the faith. Loveshould abound in all that we do. More than just knowledge, if the fruit of the Spirit is not

    characterizing our lives and our communities, then we are in the wrong movement.

    At the end of the day, we can never improve upon Jesus and his example. His passionwas for one movement alone, the Kingdom of God, and his priority was for the raising up

    of disciples through sound instruction and godly example. To authentically emulate that

    and to carry on that mission should be the raison d'etre of the Hebraic renewalcommunity.

    Click here to learn about Dwight's Haverim Study Community

    2011 The Center for Judaic-Christian Studies.

    All rights reserved.

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