
In the world of Hebrew Roots and Messianic teaching, few names carry as much weight as Monte Judah and his organization, Lion & Lamb Ministries. For years, Monte was one of my teachers. I supported his work financially and opened doors for him to speak. Like many others, I was drawn in by his passionate calls to return to Torah while still holding Yeshua as the Messiah of Israel.
But as I returned fully to Judaism and the unbroken chain of Torah, the deeper problems with Monte Judah’s teaching became impossible to ignore. What he presents as “completion” is actually a sophisticated form of replacement theology — one that keeps the language of Torah but replaces its heart with a Christian center.
The Name That Betrays the Theology
The very name of his ministry — Lion & Lamb — is the first red flag.
Isaiah 11:6 does not say “the lion shall lie down with the lamb.” The actual text reads:
“The wolf shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the young goat…” (Isaiah 11:6)
This is not a minor mistake. The “Lion and the Lamb” phrase is a well-known Christian misquote that conflates the Lion of Judah (Messiah as a conquering king) with the Lamb of God (Yeshua as a sacrifice). Monte Judah built an entire ministry around a misquotation that does not exist in the Tanakh.
This is symbolic of the larger issue: taking Jewish scripture, reshaping it to fit a Christian narrative, and presenting it as restored truth. It’s replacement theology with a Torah wrapper.
Yeshua as Messiah of Israel – But on Christian Terms
Monte Judah strongly teaches that Yeshua is the Messiah of Israel. On the surface, this sounds Jewish. But when you examine his teachings, Yeshua is not presented as the Mashiach ben David the Jewish people have awaited for centuries — the one who brings world peace, rebuilds the Temple, and gathers all the exiles.
Instead, Monte places Yeshua firmly in the Christian framework: the suffering servant who died for sins, rose again, and will return to rapture or protect His (mostly Gentile) followers. He teaches that true believers (Messianics) will rise up and go into the wilderness to survive the Great Tribulation — a “Greater Exodus” where they are preserved while judgment falls.
This is not Torah-centered eschatology. This is classic Christian end-times teaching with Hebrew flavoring.
Replacing Torah with the Christian Bible
Monte Judah’s core error is what he does with the Torah itself.
He calls the Torah “the Constitution for all believers,” which sounds good. But in practice, he filters the entire Torah through the lens of the New Testament. Yeshua becomes the ultimate interpreter and fulfiller. The feasts, Shabbat, and commandments are kept — not because they are eternal commands from Sinai for the Jewish people — but because they point to Yeshua and prepare believers for His return.
This is textbook replacement theology in “light” form:
- The physical promises to Israel are spiritualized or transferred to the “grafted-in” community.
- The Jewish people’s unique role and covenant are minimized or made optional.
- The ultimate hope is not the redemption of Israel as a nation in the Land, but a mixed body of believers surviving tribulation under Yeshua’s leadership.
Monte’s teachings on the Greater Exodus and wilderness protection during tribulation further illustrate this. He prepares his mostly non-Jewish audience to see themselves as the true remnant — the ones who will be hidden and protected while the world (including much of traditional Judaism) faces judgment. This subtly positions his followers as the “real Israel” while the Jewish people who reject Yeshua are left outside.
As a Jew: Why This Hurts
As a Jew with Cohen lineage on my mother’s side, this teaching is painful. Monte Judah, like many Messianic leaders, claims to love Israel and the Jewish people. Yet the practical outcome of his theology is that Judaism, as it has existed for 3,300 years, is incomplete and must be “completed” by accepting Yeshua.
When I returned to pure Torah observance and stopped centering Yeshua, the response from Monte’s circles (and others I supported) was telling: silence, avoidance, and in some cases, warnings not to listen to me. The same pattern I saw with Rico Cortes and Bill Cloud repeated here.
True love for Israel would rejoice when a Jew returns to the Torah of Sinai. Replacement theology cannot do that — because the Jew who returns to Torah without Yeshua exposes the addition.
The Real Lion and the Real Lamb
The Tanakh already has its lion (the Lion of Judah) and its lamb (the Passover lamb of redemption and defiance against Egypt). It doesn’t need a new composite figure to “fix” what was never broken.
Isaiah 11 is about the future Messianic age, in which natural enemies live in peace under the rule of a righteous Davidic king — not a hidden theological clue pointing to a first-century Galilean who died without bringing world peace.
Monte Judah is a gifted teacher. Many people have been blessed by his passion for Torah. But his ministry ultimately leads people to replace the pure Torah given at Sinai with a Christianized version centered on Yeshua. The name “Lion & Lamb” is the perfect symbol: a popular Christian invention that does not exist in the Jewish scriptures he claims to restore.
The Creator of Christianity was a Roman Agent
Paul the Apostle: Liar and Con Man? – Rabbi Tovia Singer’s Critique
In a recent interview on History Valley, Rabbi Tovia Singer delivers a sharp Jewish counter-missionary analysis of Paul. Singer argues that Paul deliberately misrepresented and altered the Hebrew Bible (Tanakh/Torah) to create a new religion fundamentally at odds with Judaism.
Paul’s Core Agenda According to Singer
Paul’s writings push three main ideas that clash with the Torah:
- Antinomianism — All ritual commandments are just a “shadow.” The real essence is Christ.
- Faith alone saves — Works of the law are useless.
- Gentiles are full heirs — No need for conversion to Judaism or keeping commandments.
Singer says Paul surgically edits or removes parts of the Hebrew Bible that contradict this message.
Example: Deuteronomy 30 in Romans 10. Deuteronomy 30 says the Torah is not too difficult — “you can do it.” Paul quotes part of it in Romans 10:6-8, but omits the ending that says the commandments are doable. Singer calls this “eviscerating” the text so readers miss the original point.
Paul’s Character: Disagreeable, Boastful, and Power-Hungry
- Paul constantly fights with other early Christians (Barnabas, John Mark, and Peter).
- In Galatians 2, he calls Peter a hypocrite to his face.
- He boasts: “Pharisee of Pharisees,” “Hebrew of Hebrews,” “circumcised on the eighth day,” “tribe of Benjamin.”
- Singer notes: Jews don’t usually introduce themselves by saying “I was circumcised on the eighth day.” This reads as overcompensation to impress a Gentile audience.
Singer compares Paul to Joseph Smith (founder of Mormonism) — a charismatic, temperamental figure who breaks away from the original tradition, claims direct revelation, and builds something new while claiming continuity.
“The Ends Justify the Means”
Paul openly admits his approach in 1 Corinthians 9: “To the Jews I became as a Jew… To those under the law I became as one under the law… To those outside the law I became as one outside the law… I have become all things to all people that I might by all means save some.”
Singer calls this chameleon-like behavior and says Paul’s motto was essentially “the ends justify the means.”
Misuse and Invention of Scripture
- Paul misapplies Deuteronomy 25:4 (“Do not muzzle an ox while it treads grain”) to argue for financial support of missionaries (1 Corinthians 9:9-10).
- In 1 Corinthians 15:3-4, Paul claims Jesus rose “on the third day according to the Scriptures.” Singer says no such verse exists in the Hebrew Bible.
- Galatians 3:19 claims the Torah was given through angels — a claim Singer calls a lie. The Torah presents God speaking directly at Sinai.
Hellenized Thinking
Singer views Paul as a deeply Hellenized Jew who thought in Greek categories (spiritual resurrection, etc.) rather than Jewish ones (physical resurrection, keeping commandments). This explains why his version of Christianity appealed to Gentiles but clashed with the Jerusalem church led by James.
Final Takeaway from Tovia Singer
Paul wasn’t simply misunderstanding the Torah — he was actively altering it to launch a new religion. Singer sees him as the pivotal figure who turned a Jewish messianic movement into something unrecognizable to Judaism.
The Tree of Life is still standing in the Torah. The path of the commandments is still pleasant, and all its ways are peace (Proverbs 3:17-18). We don’t need a replacement. We need faithfulness.
Hazan Gavriel ben David
















