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My name is Michael Weiner. It’s November 1982 and I’m sitting in the balcony of a coliseum type building in Roanoke, VA with my wife, Ann. It is a chilly Sunday morning and we’re in the middle of a worship service attended by 5,000 Amway distributors in the Nardone organization. More than a year earlier Pete Scalise came to the hotel I was managing looking for meeting space for his Amway distributorship. He introduced me to his sponsor, Mark Diamond, who I learned was both Jewish and Christian at the same time. That seemed so strange. Who ever heard of such a thing?

I was raised in the Conservative Synagogue, B’nai Israel, in Pensacola, Florida. We practiced our Judaism seriously. A typical week found me in the synagogue no less than five days a week. I even served as the rabbi of the Junior Congregation for a year. Mind you, I’m not complaining. In fact, I’m very thankful my mother and father took the time and other resources to bless me with an excellent Jewish upbringing. I never have to question my Jewish identity. In the Boy Scouts of America I received the Ner Tamid award given to Jewish scouts who complete the requirements. In high school I was president of my BBYO chapter, a part of the Cotton States district. In college I served at president of the Masada chapter at the University of Houston. Masada is the college youth arm of the Zionist Organization of America. In 1976 my wife, Ann and I were married in Houston by a rabbi from Port Arthur, TX. None of that went away when we accepted the Messiah as our personal Lord and Savior.

We attended our first Messianic Jewish service as non-believers on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement at Ohev Yisrael Messianic Jewish Congregation in Northern Virginia. It was great to hear that we could repent, but we already knew that from the synagogue. In the synagogue, on the Day of Atonement, Jewish people all over the world pray that they will be written in the book of life for another year. At the Messianic Jewish service we learned we could be written in the book of life for eternity. Yeshua, Jesus’ Hebrew name, calls all people everywhere to put Him above everything else. He is a perfect fit to Judaism. He calls us to be holy, to observe the commandments, to celebrate the feasts of the Lord, in short, to obey God. In fact, in the book of Hebrews His name is called “more excellent,” His ministry is called, “more excellent,” and His sacrifice is called, “more excellent.” More excellent than what? Not more excellent than the commandments, but more excellent than the Aaronic priesthood, for He is a priest forever after the order of Melchizidek (two Hebrew words meaning “a righteous king”). The rabbis have always known that when king and priest come together in one man, the Messiah has come.

Three months after that Yom Kippur service we were in that coliseum in Roanoke when the Lord began to tug at my heart. I thought about accepting the call to come forward and give my heart to the Lord when I settled back in my seat with the thought that a decision of this magnitude deserves further scrutiny. At that moment the speaker said, “I believe there is someone here who is intellectualizing this decision. God wants you to know that this is not a decision made from your intellect or mind, but from your heart. You give your heart to Him and he’ll see to it that you’re never ashamed.” I felt like he was talking personally to me. I reached over and asked Ann if she would accept the Lord with me and she did. It was near the end of the altar call but I didn’t want to slink up the side. Just like when we got married, we walked up the center isle while 5,000 people waited for us to get out of the balcony and up to the front of the coliseum. Those steps began a walk that has lasted 21 years now and will last a lifetime and beyond to eternity.

The following Shabbat Ann and I were immersed in the Mikvah (Baptized) after the Messianic Jewish service at Ohev Yisrael. Our daughters have a firm foundation in Messianic Judaism and understand the value of being connected to the recognizably Jewish part of the body of the Messiah. We served as deacons at Ohev Yisrael for about 8 years. In 1997, just before Yom Kippur we founded Shomair Yisrael Messianic Jewish Congregation. It means Watchmen (or guardian) of Israel (We kept the same last name as our home congregation). Now in our seventh year we are amazed at the growth, both in numbers (which some would consider still very small) and in community. The Lord has brought the most wonderful people to serve Him with us. We are eternally grateful.

If you are Jewish or have a Jewish friend, please allow us the opportunity to explain in ways that we could never put in print we are more Jewish than ever now that we have a personal relationship with the Jewish Messiah. Contact Michael Weiner at 865-414-4527 or email at weinerm@attglobal.net.