Tisha B'Av, which translates
as the ninth of Av (this year it falls on Aug 10, 2008), ends a
three-week period of semi-mourning which starts with the Fast of
Tammuz. The ninth of Av, however, is the peak of this mourning
period, where tradition prevents our people from shaving, eating,
and entertainment. The reason for this distress is remembrance of
events that have happened in the lives of the Jewish people. The
rabbis teach that all these things happened on the ninth of Av:
· Sin of the spies which
caused the Lord to decree that the people of Israel would not be
permitted to enter the land (Ex.
· Destruction of the First
Temple (586 BC)
· Destruction of the
Second Temple (70 AD)
· Fall of Betar, the last
fortress to hold out against the Romans during the Bar Kochba
revolt in the year 135 AD. This sealed the fate of the Jewish
people and beginning the exile from Judea
· One year after the fall
of Betar, the Temple area was razed and plowed under by the
Romans
· In 1492, King Ferdinand
of Spain issued the expulsion decree, setting Tisha B'Av as the
final date by which not a single Jew would be allowed to walk on
Spanish soil.
· World War I – which
began the downward slide to the Holocaust.
Its Meaning, Today and Tomorrow
Though most Jewish people are secularized and perhaps therefore
unaware of Tisha B'Av, the orthodox Jewish community takes it quite
seriously. Thus if your Jewish friends and acquaintances are
observing this day, treat them as one in mourning, and do not invite
them to go out to eat, the movies or any other enjoyable events. In
fact, though they may love you, do not expect them to greet you
happily, which is not permitted on this day. They will be quite
reserved, solemn and sad on this day.
The rabbis have identified
this day with the fast of the fifth month (Av) as noted in Zechariah
7:5. This fast of the fifth month probably developed as a response
to the Babylonian exile.
Zechariah goes on to say,
"Thus says the LORD of hosts, … the fast of the fifth … will become
joy, gladness, and cheerful feasts for the house of Judah…"
(Zechariah 8:19). These "fasts becoming feasts" are traditionally
understood as occurring in the messianic age, and then our sorrows
will be turned to joy. In Messiah Yeshua we have certainly
experienced the truth of the Lord's grace transforming our sadness
to gladness.
Using it with Liberty
For those of us that have received Messiah's forgiveness and
fullness and can "rejoice in the Lord always" (Philippians 4:4), we
are still responsible to care about those who are hurting and have
compassion and even empathy in their distress.
Should Messianic believers
observe Tisha B'Av today? That is up to you and your congregation to
decide. If your witness to our people identifies you with those who
mourn, the Bible states that we should "weep with those who weep"
(Romans 12:15). If your congregation is located in a particularly
observant Jewish community, it is most appropriate to respectfully
have a day of prayer for Israel and the Jewish people, or at very
least not plan a celebration on that day.
If your witness is to a more
secularized or less observant Jewish community, then commemorating
Tisha B'Av might not communicate any witness at all, and just seem
odd. So utilize your spiritual witness to communicate Messiah's love
to the particular Jewish community where you're located. As Paul
wrote regarding his own witness in the Jewish community, "To those
under the Law, as under the Law… to those without Law as without
Law…" (1 Corinthians 9:20-21).
In all things let us love as
we have been loved and "comfort others with the very comfort we have
received," that in all events and on all days Messiah Yeshua may be
glorified and His grace proven to be sufficient for all:
Blessed be the God and Father of our
Lord Yeshua the Messiah, the Father of mercies and God of all
comfort, who comforts us in all our affliction so that we will be
able to comfort those who are in any affliction with the comfort
with which we ourselves are comforted by God. (2 Cor. 1:3-4).
Y