the world in Exile entirely as it had
been, tales of his resurrection notwithstanding.
However, Rabbi Pinchas
Winston writes:
Moshiach Ben Yosef’s
success, by our standard of measurement, is a limited one. Not only will he
be, or perhaps already is (or even already was), human, he will be humanly
vulnerable. In fact, according to one opinion in the Talmud, Moshiach Ben
Yosef will leave this world without being able to see the fruits of his
labors.
What does THAT mean? It is strange to think that both "branches" of "Christianity"
failed at accomplishing their mission. The
Gentiles, who were suppose to be Noahide supporters
of the Jews, instead became persecutors, and Yeshua
(who believed he was Messiah ben Joseph) along with the Jewish
leaders, never did find the Lost Tribes that were exiled. Most of them, within a short
time, died violent deaths at the hands of pagans.
Judging Christianity from its first
hundred years, it was a miserable failure. So
what was it all for? Why did Christianity even come
into existence?