Job, Gentiles, and the Ninth of the Month of Av

We are in the stretch of time on the Jewish calendar known as “The Three Weeks,” or Bein HaMetzarim (“Between the Straights,” בין המצרים). It is the three-week period between the Fast of Tammuz and the Ninth of Av.

Both are fast days connected with the destruction of the Temple and the current state of exile. Jews around the world are united together to fast, pray, and repent for not only the current state of the Jewish nation but also of the whole world.

Therefore, it saddens me when I mention this period of time in conversations with other Gentiles like myself who are participants in Messianic Judaism in one way or another. Many non-Jewish disciples of Yeshua with whom I come into contact express a lack of interest and disconnect with these fast days and the traditions that surround them. They dismiss them as “traditions of men” that are “not biblical, just Jewish,” as if somehow just because they are Jewish they are not for us or, worse yet, are not important.

First, it is a misnomer to say they are not biblical. They are mentioned in the book of Zechariah:

Thus says the LORD of hosts: The fast of the fourth month and the fast of the fifth and the fast of the seventh and the fast of the tenth shall be to the house of Judah seasons of joy and gladness and cheerful feasts. Therefore love truth and peace. (Zechariah 8:19)

“The fast of the fourth month” is the Fast of Tammuz and “the fast of the fifth” is the Ninth of Av. The prophet does not say “your fast” but “the fast” implying that these are divinely sanctioned fast days. Furthermore we are told that in the Messianic Kingdom these days will become days of joy and gladness. For Israel, their mourning will be turned into rejoicing, but one will be able to fully appreciate the joy of the restoration of the Messianic Kingdom only by mourning for the exile in this current era. How can Messianic Gentiles fully appreciate turning these fasts into feasts if we don’t participate in them now? These fasts are kingdom-related.

Second, I think we can learn something from the book of Job, which is one of the few biblical texts that are traditionally permitted to be read on the Ninth of Av. While some of the sages debated whether or not Job was Jewish, most rabbis hold the view that he was a pious God-fearing Gentile.[1] There is also a tradition that Job kept the Torah, even so far as to voluntarily keep the tithing commandments that are applicable only within the land of Israel.[2]

Throughout the book of Job, he suffers and loses everything; although in the end it is all restored. The sages compare Job’s suffering to that of Israel’s. William G. Braude writes:

The words that Jeremiah uses of Israel and her suffering are much the same as those used by Job and his suffering; hence … [Pesikta DeRav Kahana shows that the parallels are a] reassurance to Israel that as the outcome for Job was comfort for his suffering, so the outcome for Israel will be comfort for her suffering.[3]

It is even thought that through the suffering of Job and the merit that he attained, Israel was able to be delivered from the hands of the Egyptians:

R. Jose b. Halafta said: “He was born when they went down into Egypt, and died when they went up out of Egypt. You will find that in essence his life’s span was two hundred and ten years, while Israel spent two hundred and ten years in Egypt. Now when Satan came to denounce Israel, God incited him against Job instead.” (Genesis Rabbah 57:4)

What then can Messianic Gentiles learn from Job? In the Jewish mindset, Job was a righteous Gentile among the nations who loved God’s Torah so much that he took upon himself commandments that he wasn’t even obligated to observe. Additionally, his suffering aided the Jewish people. When Messianic Gentiles join in with the Jewish people on fasts such as the Ninth of Av they are participating in hastening the redemption and the return of our Messiah Yeshua. Additionally, those who fast and mourn now will fully appreciate when, in the Messianic Era, these biblical times of mourning will be turned into times of rejoicing.

Footnotes:
  1. b.Bava Batra 14b-16b.
  2. Pesikta DeRav Kahana 10:7.
  3. Commenting on Pesikta DeRav Kahana 16:6. See William G. Braude, Pesikta De-Rab Kahana (Philadelphia, PA: JPS, 2002), 393.

Source: First Fruits of Zion