Resource Publications, an imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers
9798385274291 / paperback / $24/
What if we have misunderstood the “last days” by not listening closely enough to the people who lived them first? The Last Days According to Jesus’ Family retells the New Testament through the witness of Mary and Jesus’ brothers James and Jude—voices that bring fresh clarity to Acts 15, sharpen Jude’s warnings about distortion, and reframe prophecy as covenant faithfulness rather than fear or political triumph. Rooted in the Abrahamic promise of blessing for all peoples, this book calls the Western church back to an older storyline: Israel’s continuing role, the nations’ grafted-in hope, and a renewed attention to the whole family of Abraham—including the often-forgotten threads of Ishmael and Esau. For readers weary of end-times hype, this is an invitation to recover a sturdier hope: the one Jesus’ own family carried.
Praise for
The Last Days According to Jesus' Family: The Story We Left Behind
“M. L. Banzhaf ’s study invites readers to examine the traditions surrounding early Christianity with careful attention to their historical and theological context. As a student of Rabbi Eliyahu Benamozegh, whose Israel and Humanity envisioned a constructive relationship between Judaism and Christianity, I welcome works that pursue serious and respectful engagement and help renew our shared scriptural heritage.”
—Ben Abrahamson, Director, Al-Sadiqin Institute
“Marty opens our eyes to see past centuries of Western church, back to ekklesia rooted in family, around tables, in community. Rich insight into Jesus’ own family and Jewish community, and capable detangling of years of empire, church, and forced eschatology, lead us to see—and be—the faithful people of God in fellowship and on mission in these last days.”
—Tim Crouch, Vice President for Alliance Missions, The Christian and Missionary Alliance
“In The Last Days According to Jesus’ Family, M. L. Banzhaf invites readers to reconsider the end not as a timeline to decode, but as a covenantal story to inhabit. With careful attention to Scripture, history, and lived experience, he offers a vision shaped less by fear and more by humility, healing, and hope. This is a thoughtful and needed contribution for those seeking a deeper, more faithful reading of the biblical
narrative of the last days.
—Hunter Barnes, Host, Daily Radio Bible Podcast
“Banzhaf weaves his own spiritual journey throughout this book with both theological rigor and pastoral sensitivity, addressing divisive issues such as Christian nationalism, dispensationalism, and replacement theology, not to inflame controversy, but to heal theological fractures. The result is not so much mind-blowing as mind-stretching—a work that invites pastors and scholars alike to think beyond our traditional and popular frameworks and calls the church back to A. B. Simpson’s ‘center of gravity: a Christ-shaped theology ordered toward mission.’ The appendices and Franklin Pyle’s foreword are essential reading as capstones for the book.
—Paul L. King, Ordained Pastor, The Christian and Missionary Alliance
“Banzhaf courageously challenges readers to reconsider the stories that have shaped our imagination. Mary and her family, and the early Jewish followers of Jesus, are not tribal weapons meant to justify hostility. They are invitations to rediscover God’s covenantal purposes—purposes rooted in mercy, faithfulness, and the restoration of relationship. . . . For those of us who live in the land where these biblical stories took place, the questions raised in this book are not abstract theological debates. They shape how Christians understand their neighbors, how they pray for peace, and how they embody the gospel in a fractured world. The church does not serve the kingdom of God by amplifying division. Rather, we serve Christ when we become witnesses to his reconciling love. If this book helps the church rediscover that calling—even in small ways—it will have served the gospel well. May these pages encourage readers to seek truth, pursue mercy, and remember that the story of God has always been, and will always be, a story of family gathered by grace.”
—Jack Sara, President, Bethlehem Bible College
“It was not only a great pleasure but also a deep learning experience to host Martin Banzhaf on The Meaning Code YouTube channel back in 2022. Major kudos that he has written a book that puts these ideas together in a compelling format, and so beautifully written as to be almost poetic.”
—Karen Wong, Host, The Meaning Code
“In this warm and heartfelt book, Marty has woven personal memoir, historical research, and theological reflection into a narrative that asks the reader to put aside dogmatics and enter instead into the story of God for the world. Using the Torat Edom—a concept that many in the Evangelical world will do well to comprehend—Marty has provided a framework for understanding the last days that focuses on lived experience rather than the abstract countdown of eschatological events. Indeed, we are reminded that the last days are better read not as the triumph of Christians over other religions, particularly those of Judaism and Islam, but the story of the covenant God who is fulfilling his covenant promises. In following the example of Jesus’ own family—through expressing mercy (Mary), faithfulness (James), and perseverance (Jude), we better reflect the heart of God for all of humanity. With personal prose and accounts of his own upbringing as a refugee and later missionary work providing a real-world grounding, Marty exhorts us to live as citizens of the coming kingdom in the present—even as we await its ultimate unveiling.”
—Peter Laughlin, Chair, International Commission of Theological Education, Alliance World Fellowship
Interview with M.L. Banzhaf
What is your book about?
The Last Days According to Jesus’ Family explores the “last days” through the world of Jesus, His family, and the first Jewish followers who carried His message forward. Rather than treating prophecy as a chart of future events, the book asks what Jesus and His family believed was unfolding in their own generation. It is a book about Scripture, history, memory, and the story the Church often left behind.
Why did you write this book?
I wrote this book because many Christians have inherited an end-times framework that is often disconnected from Jesus’ Jewish world. After years of ministry, study, and conversation with Jewish, Christian, and discerning ancient Middle Eastern texts, I became convinced that we need to recover the family context of Jesus and the covenant story that shaped the New Testament and helps us read it better in order to live its authority.
What makes this book different from other books on the end times?
Most books on the last days focus on modern events, prediction, or systems of interpretation. This book begins instead with Jesus’ own family, the Jewish world of the first century, and the biblical story of Israel as an expansion to the nations not just as a geopolitical nation or spiritualized concept. It does not deny the future hope of Jesus Christ’s return, but it challenges readers to first understand what “the last days”
meant in the apostolic world.
Who is the intended audience for this book
This book is written for thoughtful Christians, pastors, Bible teachers, missionaries, and serious readers who sense that popular end-times teaching has often missed something important. It is accessible for non-specialists but grounded in Scripture, history, and theological reflection. Readers do not need to agree with every conclusion to benefit from the larger invitation: to read the New Testament closer to its original Jewish setting over the standard narrative of Christianity.
Why focus on Jesus’ family?
Jesus’ family was not a side issue in the early movement; they were part of the living memory of His ministry, death, resurrection, and message. Figures like Mary, James, and Jude help us see that the Gospel was not born as an abstract religion but within a Jewish family, a covenant people, through the Nazarene movement as a concrete historical moment to guide ours. Recovering their witness helps us better understand the continuity between Jesus, Israel, and the mission to the nations.
Does this book reject traditional Christian eschatology?
No, it does not reject the Christian hope of Christ’s return, resurrection, judgment, and renewal. But it does question approaches that turn eschatology into dogmatism, fear, speculation, or detachment from the mission of the God of Abraham and his family and lost family members like the Woman at Jacob’s Well in John 4, for the time is always now. The book argues that biblical hope should make us more faithful, more humble, and more deeply committed to witness in the present age.
What do you hope readers take away from the book?
I hope readers come away with a renewed love for Scripture and a deeper appreciation for the Jewish world of Jesus and the apostles. Above all, I want readers to encounter Jesus not as a figure detached from Israel, but as the faithful Son who brings the biblical narratives of Israel and Edom to the nations.
Why is this book important now?
Many Christians today are confused, anxious, or polarized by end-times teaching. At the same time, there is a growing need to recover the Hebrew voice and a proper Jewish context of the New Testament and to confront forms of theology that have forgotten Israel’s continuing role as the story of Abraham’s God from a reading that has also kept us divided as his family was, yet eventually reconciled. Beyond geopolitics, this book expresses a longing to be faithful in our witness over our divided opinions and readings of scripture.
Jesus brings us back to the biblical center: not an abstract deity behind the text, but the Father made known in the Son—God acting, promising, judging, forgiving, healing, and gathering. And that “gathering” has an early name in Acts: the Way. Before “Christian” became common speech, Luke remembers the movement as a path—an embodied manner of life, a walk. That label isn’t a break from Israel; it is Israel-language translated into the street Greek of the empire. A people who “ walk” in God’s ways now confess that the Way has a face and a voice. Jesus does not merely point toward the road; He says, “I am the way” (John 14:6). This is also why Jesus’ invitation to take His yoke matters. “My yoke is easy, ” He says—not because it is thin, but because it is true (Matt. 11:30). He is not offering an anti-Torah religion; He is offering Messiah’s yoke: covenant carried as mercy, obedience carried by the Spirit, discipleship unhooked from fear and spiritual performance. And that helps us read Acts 15 with sobriety.
When Peter protests the “yoke” that some wanted to place on Gentiles, he is not calling Judaism a burden. He is rejecting the demand that Gentiles must undergo full proselyte conversion—circumcision and the entire package—as the price of belonging. The Council refuses that yoke and instead gives a narrow set of baseline boundaries that make shared life and shared table possible, while Moses is still read every Sabbath. In other words, the nations enter Israel’s story through a merciful gate, not by replacing Israel and not by being crushed under an imposed identity they were never commanded to bear. When Jesus entered Jerusalem, He did not marshal an army. He came as Zechariah foretold: humble, riding on a donkey. He wept over the city that refused mercy. He did not curse Israel; He carried Israel’s grief. He did not abandon His people; He bore their destiny.
And when the crisis finally came, Jesus’ greatest claim did not need pagan borrowing or philosophical cover. Alan Segal’s work on the rabbinic “two powers” controversy (too often treated as a master key in popular reconstructions) helps us see why: the categories in question were already being contested within Jewish Scriptural interpretation—especially around enthronement and agency texts like Daniel 7.
The pressure points were Jewish before they were philosophical. Jesus of Nazareth spoke in Israel’s own Scripture-grammar—the Son of Man from Daniel’s vision. Under oath and under pressure, He spoke the sentence that explains the ferocity of His accusers: the Son of Man would come with the clouds and would be seated at the right hand of Power.
Jesus’ family was not a side issue in the early movement; they were part of the living memory of His ministry, death, resurrection, and message. Figures like Mary, James, and Jude help us see that the Gospel was not born as an abstract religion but within a Jewish family, a covenant people, through the Nazarene movement as a concrete historical moment to guide ours. Recovering their witness helps us better understand the continuity between Jesus, Israel, and the mission to the nations.
Does this book reject traditional Christian eschatology?
No, it does not reject the Christian hope of Christ’s return, resurrection, judgment, and renewal. But it does question approaches that turn eschatology into dogmatism, fear, speculation, or detachment from the mission of the God of Abraham and his family and lost family members like the Woman at Jacob’s Well in John 4, for the time is always now. The book argues that biblical hope should make us more faithful, more humble, and more deeply committed to witness in the present age.
What do you hope readers take away from the book?
I hope readers come away with a renewed love for Scripture and a deeper appreciation for the Jewish world of Jesus and the apostles. Above all, I want readers to encounter Jesus not as a figure detached from Israel, but as the faithful Son who brings the biblical narratives of Israel and Edom to the nations.
Why is this book important now?
Many Christians today are confused, anxious, or polarized by end-times teaching. At the same time, there is a growing need to recover the Hebrew voice and a proper Jewish context of the New Testament and to confront forms of theology that have forgotten Israel’s continuing role as the story of Abraham’s God from a reading that has also kept us divided as his family was, yet eventually reconciled. Beyond geopolitics, this book expresses a longing to be faithful in our witness over our divided opinions and readings of scripture.
Excerpt from Chapter 6: Jesus the Face of the Father
Jesus brings us back to the biblical center: not an abstract deity behind the text, but the Father made known in the Son—God acting, promising, judging, forgiving, healing, and gathering. And that “gathering” has an early name in Acts: the Way. Before “Christian” became common speech, Luke remembers the movement as a path—an embodied manner of life, a walk. That label isn’t a break from Israel; it is Israel-language translated into the street Greek of the empire. A people who “ walk” in God’s ways now confess that the Way has a face and a voice. Jesus does not merely point toward the road; He says, “I am the way” (John 14:6). This is also why Jesus’ invitation to take His yoke matters. “My yoke is easy, ” He says—not because it is thin, but because it is true (Matt. 11:30). He is not offering an anti-Torah religion; He is offering Messiah’s yoke: covenant carried as mercy, obedience carried by the Spirit, discipleship unhooked from fear and spiritual performance. And that helps us read Acts 15 with sobriety.
When Peter protests the “yoke” that some wanted to place on Gentiles, he is not calling Judaism a burden. He is rejecting the demand that Gentiles must undergo full proselyte conversion—circumcision and the entire package—as the price of belonging. The Council refuses that yoke and instead gives a narrow set of baseline boundaries that make shared life and shared table possible, while Moses is still read every Sabbath. In other words, the nations enter Israel’s story through a merciful gate, not by replacing Israel and not by being crushed under an imposed identity they were never commanded to bear. When Jesus entered Jerusalem, He did not marshal an army. He came as Zechariah foretold: humble, riding on a donkey. He wept over the city that refused mercy. He did not curse Israel; He carried Israel’s grief. He did not abandon His people; He bore their destiny.
And when the crisis finally came, Jesus’ greatest claim did not need pagan borrowing or philosophical cover. Alan Segal’s work on the rabbinic “two powers” controversy (too often treated as a master key in popular reconstructions) helps us see why: the categories in question were already being contested within Jewish Scriptural interpretation—especially around enthronement and agency texts like Daniel 7.
The pressure points were Jewish before they were philosophical. Jesus of Nazareth spoke in Israel’s own Scripture-grammar—the Son of Man from Daniel’s vision. Under oath and under pressure, He spoke the sentence that explains the ferocity of His accusers: the Son of Man would come with the clouds and would be seated at the right hand of Power.
That is why the reaction was so severe. They did not hear a mere teacher predicting vindication. They heard a Galilean Jew placing Himself inside the throne room of Israel’s God—claiming the authority of the heavenly court, the right to sit down where no creature sits, and the destiny of the nations described in Daniel’s dominion vision. The outrage was not confusion. It was recognition. His claim was not, “I have an idea.” It was, “I have a seat” —not a seat stolen from God, but a seat that discloses how God turns His face toward the world.“
Rev. M. L. Banzhaf is an evangelical missionary with more than four decades of cross-cultural ministry, currently serving with the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Italy. He has served on mission ships and in relief and development work and holds multiple graduate degrees. His writing focuses on reading the Bible as a covenantal family story and calling the church back to humble, outward-facing witness among the nations.









