The Gospel According to Moses: What My Jewish Friends Taught Me about Jesus
The Gospel According to Moses: What my Jewish friends taught me about Jesus, Athol Dickson, Brazos Press, 2003, ISBN 1-58743-048-7
“If ever there was a time to learn the truth about our differences from each other rather than reinforce false assumptions among ourselves, it is now.”
In the past ten years or so there has been, in many Christian circles, a reconnecting to our Jewish root. There have been many books written about “Jewish things” and how they correlate to our Christian faith and what, if anything, we as believers in Jesus should do with them.
This is not another of these books. It is the true story of Athol Dickson as he chronicles his journey of discovery in the pages of The Gospel According to Moses. What does he discover? “That Christianity is a reasonable response to the books of Moses, the writings, and the prophets. That the most basic tenets of our faith are rooted in the earliest moments of creation. That ours is a Torah-based faith.”
Dickson’s discovery begins after being invited to a Chever Torah or “Torah Fellowship” (chever is Hebrew for “fellowship” or “association”), by a Jewish friend. For five years he gathers each Saturday with a group of fellow learners at the local Reform Temple to study the Torah. Being the only Christian in the group he maintains a low profile and chooses to listen, learn and ponder the things he hears. What Dickson records for us are his thoughts about the new ideas he’s hearing, the questions that form as he wrestles with how these new ideas ‘fit’ into his understanding of his Christian faith, and his personal conclusions or determinations about each new idea.
To give you a glimpse into the kinds of new ideas Dickson is presented with, the first is the fact that these Jewish learners don’t shy away from asking difficult, almost heretical questions—they even question God. It is in the midst of the lively discussion that follows such questions that Dickson realizes he must go deeper into the Scriptures than he ever has before, he must honestly seek God as he grapples with what he’s been taught the Scriptures say and what they actually say and that there may not be cut and dried answers to these questions, but rather a balanced “yes” and “yes.”
If you are someone who has often found the Scriptures to be paradoxical and even difficult to believe, if you are someone who has wanted to ask the question you knew would be viewed as almost heretical, I highly recommend this book to you. If you are someone who wants to begin to understand how our Jewish brothers and sisters view Christians and the doctrines we espouse, this is a must-read. If you are someone who likes to think outside the box, you need this book in your library.
Athol Dickson, in a thoughtful, insightful, easy style, confronts some of the most difficult issues of our faith and allows us to be the beneficiaries of his understanding of Christianity in light of the Torah and the teaching of Moses.
I give this refreshing read five stars! Jody Hysler






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