Hillel’s Missionary: Paul Beyond Judaism and Christian Misunderstanding



Paul’s Letter to the Romans 12:17-21 
paraphrased in The Message 

Don’t hit back; discover beauty in everyone. If you’ve got it in you, get along with everybody. Don’t insist on getting even; that’s not for you to do. “I’ll do the judging,” says God. “I’ll take care of it.” 

Our Scriptures tell us that if you see your enemy hungry, go buy that person lunch, or if he’s thirsty, get him a drink. Your generosity will surprise him with goodness. Don’t let evil get the best of you; get the best of evil by doing good.





Reframing the Apostle through 
the lens of Torah, mission, and Torat Edom


Perhaps the Apostle Paul was the most agile and prolific Pharisee of the Hillelite School. His real opposition was not to Torah itself but first to the political messianism that had fused nationalist fervor with apocalyptic expectation but then to opportunity to diversify the growing Jesus Movement among the nations.

He operated within Pikuach Nefesh (to save a life especially on the Sabbath). His “conversion,” then, was not a betrayal of Judaism but the kind of spiritual awakening found throughout the faithful — a turning from zeal for control to zeal for grace. Included in this is the understanding of what Paul meant by the works of the law.


James Tabor rightly emphasizes Paul’s importance for understanding Jesus of Nazareth. Yet he continues to read both figures through the lens of older German-critical paradigmsBauer, Schweitzer, and the early “historical Jesus” school—which remain bound to Roman revisionism and its false dichotomy between law and grace. They overlook that Jesus Himself stood firmly within the Hillelite tradition: a preacher of mercy, not revolution; of repentance, not revolt.

Paul simply carried that same Hillelite impulse beyond Judea, embodying what Torat Edom calls the reconciliation of justice and mercy across nations. Yet before his encounter on the Damascus road—preceded by his resistance to false messianic movements—Paul may well have regarded Jesus of Nazareth and His talmudim as representing the same political distortions he opposed. This helps explain his presence at the stoning of Stephen in Acts 7, when zeal for purity eclipsed mercy.

Therefore, I believe Tabor misses a crucial foundation: Paul’s transformation was not from Judaism to Christianity, but from defensive zeal to faithful discernment—the awakening of a Hillelite heart under Gamaliel’s tutelage, in a time when Shammaite Pharisees clearly held sway.


In Paul and Jesus (2012) and The Jesus Dynasty (2006), Tabor portrays Paul as a radical innovator who diverged sharply from the original Jerusalem leadership (James and Peter). He argues that Paul’s theology introduced a new, mystical Christ-religion that broke continuity with Torah observance and Jewish identity. Tabor sees Paul as influenced more by apocalyptic revelation and Greco-Roman mystery traditions than by any rabbinic or Pharisaic school.


Within Torat Edom, Paul becomes the hinge between Israel and Edom, between the prophetic conscience of Torah and the philosophical restlessness of the Gentile world. He translates the faith of Abraham into covenantal language that Edom could hear without severing Israel’s root. His mission was not to invent a new religion but to graft estranged branches back into the cultivated tree — to bring the spirit of Hillel into the world of Caesar, where mercy would have to take the form of mission.


Paul’s intensity about the “Second Coming” must be read through that same lens. His expectation of the Lord’s return was not obsession but prophetic urgency — the Hillelite conviction that redemption begins whenever heaven touches earth through acts of mercy. His cry of Maranatha! expresses the nearness of the world-to-come pressing into history, not escapism from it. For him, the “coming” was both a promise and a present reality: the Kingdom already breaking in through transformed lives.


Seen this way, Paul is not the founder of Christianity but the redeemer of misunderstanding — the bridge where the light of Torah begins to heal the nations and where Jacob and Esau start, at last, to recognize one another again.


As someone who has served in Christian mission for more than forty years, I understand this deeply. Paul’s urgency, his crossing of cultural boundaries, and his unrelenting hope for the Lord’s appearing are not abstractions — they are the missionary heartbeat itself. Wherever the gospel enters new soil, it meets the same tension between zeal and mercy, nationalism and grace, that Paul faced. His letters read less like theological essays and more like field reports from the frontier of redemption.


And perhaps that is what Paul knew most clearly: life is short.


Not short in despair, but short in opportunity — short enough that mercy must never wait, that reconciliation must never be postponed.  His haste was not fear of time running out, but love refusing to waste a moment.


👉 For a Deeper Dive 

Recovering the Jewish Light Behind Nicaea



The 1,700-year anniversary of the Council of Nicaea, celebrated during October 2025  in Istanbul and Egypt, calls us to more than doctrinal memory. For most, Nicaea signals the triumph of creed—“Light from Light, true God from true God.” Yet that luminous formula was first born in the language of Presence—and its neglect has also challenged our unity.



Long before theologians debated substance or essence, Israel already knew the Sar HaPanim—the Prince of the Presence—who went before them (Exod. 23:20–21; Isa. 63:9). Centuries later, the Church confessed Him in Greek terms; but Israel had already met Him as the Face of God that blesses and redeems.

This post sketches the connection between Nicaea’s creed and the memory preserved in Jewish Machzorim—the High Holy Day prayerbooks that still echo the Face of God. And though many have not yet recognized Him, Jesus of Nazareth—the Messiah—still shines through their prayers and praises.


1) Light that speaks, not just shines
“Light from Light” was never meant to freeze mystery into metaphysics. In Scripture it echoes the first radiance from God’s Face: “In your light we see light” (Ps. 36:9). By framing the confession in philosophical language (homoousios), the relational Face sometimes became an abstract essence instead of the dynamic Presence.

In Israel’s tradition, Sar HaPanim is not a principle but a Mediator—the Name of YHWH dwelling among His people. When the Church echoes “Light from Light,” it is confessing this ancient conviction: God is present—personal, redemptive, covenantal. This is kosher Christology.


2) The Prayer Book’s hidden witness
As the Church drifted toward sacramental systems and abstraction (even the Reformation did not fully correct the Constantinian trajectory), Judaism as Paul’s Cultivated Olive Tree understood preserved the Presence in their prayer books as such are the oracle keepers after all. (Rom. 3:2)

The Machzor is not an outline of doctrine; it is a memory-house of covenantal longing. Through piyyutim, worshipers invoke the Sar HaPanim, the Memra (Word), and the shining Face that grants forgiveness. In Yom Kippur’s Avodah, the High Priest emerges from the Holy of Holies radiant—a living enactment of the revealed Face.
 
Scholars like Xus Casal have shown how Machzor liturgy holds an echo of the same Presence Nicaea sought to express. It reminds us: forgiveness comes from a Face presence, not a metaphysical formula. The Lamb slain before the foundation of the world (Rev13:8). Yom Kippur is exactly on the opposite pole from passover.


3) A Kosher Reading of Nicaea — Beyond the Constantinian Drift
To read Nicaea kosherly is to read it covenantally, not imperially. The Creed defended the faith for unity, but Constantine’s empire soon refashioned it into a tool of control. “Light from Light” became less about divine Presence and more about power over Christology.


The original confession spoke of the Face that shines—God dwelling among His people. Under Constantine, that living light was absorbed into hierarchy and metaphysics. The Machzor’s memory of the Sar HaPanim preserves what the empire forgot: forgiveness and glory come from a Face, not a formula.

Root — Yeshua, the Root of David, fulfills Israel’s promise.
Branch — Believers are grafted into that same covenant life (Rom 11:16–24).
Presence — The Word made flesh is Sar HaPanim, blessing the nations.


To recover Nicaea’s light is to let covenant outshine empire or theological control—faith before system, Presence before power, humility before hierarchy.

👉 For the full, deeper theological treatment, read Semper Reformanda.