Chicago, IL – A Chicago Couple Lives Like Orthodox Jews — And Spreads The Word Of J

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    Chicago, IL – A few months ago, a couple got involved in the Chicago Jewish community. Rivkah Weber and David Costello started attending an Orthodox synagogue in the West Ridge neighborhood. They looked and acted like Orthodox Jews: Weber covered her hair and wore long skirts, while Costello sported sidelocks and a kippah. The latter took a job at a kosher supermarket.

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    But on Wednesday, warnings started spreading on Jewish Facebook groups in Chicago and beyond saying the couple, the parents of two children, were actually Christian missionaries.

    “[T]o answer the rumors, it is true that a couple moved into our community in the purpose of proselytizing … They are confirmed missionaries,” read one post, which contained photos of the couple dressed in traditional Orthodox garb.

    Reached Friday by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, the couple said they do believe in Jesus and that one reason they had become involved in the Jewish community was to spread their beliefs.

    “We want Jewish people to recognize Yeshua as Moshiach and as a Jewish Messiah,” Costello said in the phone interview, using the Hebrew words for Jesus and the Messiah.

    He claims that he never hid his beliefs if asked and spoke with people in the community about them, but would not specify how many. Costello, who peppers his speech with Hebrew and Yiddish words, said the family is sincere in their observance of an Orthodox lifestyle.

    “We actually keep the Torah and the mitzvahs,” he said. “We actually have an Orthodox life in our house and every day of our life, and they are saying that it’s simply to deceive and to bring Jewish people to believe in Jesus.” He denies the claim.

    On Thursday, JTA spoke with three rabbis who had interacted with the couple. None would allow their names to be printed in the article.

    “People feel betrayed,” said one rabbi, who leads a community in Chicago. “If you want to believe in something and sell it, that’s your business. But to come into a community and portray to be something you’re not, prey on people, unsuspecting, is unacceptable.”

    On Tuesday, the rabbi said, a Brooklyn man who was visiting the city attended services at a local synagogue and recognized Costello as the same person who had attended his synagogue at home for six months before congregants found out that he believed in Jesus and had ties to a missionary group.

    The rabbi was informed of this and approached Costello the next day.

    COLlive, a community news site, quoted Rabbi Levi Notik of FREE, a Chabad community for Russian Jews, in a report about the pair. Notik said Costello did not deny his belief in Jesus when confronted.

    “On the contrary, he insists that he is correct in his way and has no regrets,” the rabbi said.

    JTA obtained a document from 2016 in which it said that David Costello was employed by Global Gates, an organization whose mission is “to see gospel transformation of the world’s most unevangelized people groups (sic) who have come to global gateway cities, and through them reach their communities around the world.” The organization names various Jewish and Hasidic groups in a listing of the “most significant unreached people group communities in Metro NY.”

    Global Gates told JTA in an email on Thursday that the Costellos no longer worked for the organization.

    “They were previously employed by Global Gates for less than a year. Their relationship with Global Gates ended in July 2017,” wrote David Garrison, the organization’s executive director.

    Garrison would not answer additional questions about the nature of the Costellos’ work.

    Costello, 37, was raised in a Christian family in New Jersey but says his maternal great-grandmother was Jewish. He says his wife, 27, is from North Carolina and may have some Jewish ancestry on her father’s side but has not been able to verify it.

    Though traditional Judaism believes in the concept of a Messiah, no Jewish denominations consider Jesus to be the Messiah. Messianic groups, such as Jews for Jesus, are not accepted as Jewish by the broader Jewish community, even though some adherents may have been born Jewish and their ritual life includes Jewish practices.

    Costello denied reports that his wife had worked as a babysitter in Chicago and tried to talk to children about her faith.

    Facebook posts circulating this week shared an article from the newsletter of Johnson County for Israel, an evangelical group based in Texas, that profiles a couple named “David and Rivkah” and describes their activities doing missionary work among Hasidim.

    “David and Rivkah have taken a very costly yet bold stand for the Lord in Brooklyn as they live kosher among Hasidim while serving Jesus as their Savior,” the newsletter dated November 2016 reads.

    Costello told JTA that he and his wife were the couple described, but that the newsletter inaccurately implied they had adopted an Orthodox Jewish lifestyle simply to convert people.

    Another Orthodox rabbi and community leader in Chicago said that during Purim, some families had found gift baskets at their homes containing missionary materials but it wasn’t clear at the time who had put them there. The rabbi said he now believes it was the work of the couple. Costello denied he and his wife were behind this and said the couple had done something similar years ago, but not in Chicago.

    The second rabbi, who had several interactions with the couple, had not suspected that they were missionaries, but said he had felt something wasn’t quite right.

    For example, he said that Costello had vast knowledge about the Bible but spoke poor Hebrew. And though Weber dressed quite modestly, she did not always wear darker colors, as traditionally favored by Hasidic women, and did not correctly pronounce certain Hebrew and Yiddish words.

    “I just thought that there was something off,” the rabbi said.

    The second rabbi and community leader put JTA in touch with a rabbi in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Williamsburg who confirmed that the couple had been attending a synagogue there for six months before their beliefs and ties to Global Gates were revealed. The Brooklyn rabbi said the couple was told not to return to the synagogue after they stood by their beliefs.

    Also in Chicago, the pair were told they were not welcome and Costello said he lost his job at the kosher store.

    The first local rabbi, who said people felt betrayed by the couple, said the community had warmly welcomed Costello and Weber.

    “They came to Chicago, they moved into their neighborhood, dressing and behaving outwardly like Hasidic Jews,” he said. “They were welcomed into the community and befriending everyone.”


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    51 Comments
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    anon1m0us
    anon1m0us
    4 years ago

    Bh the faces are obscured so they can continue their unholy work

    commonsense99
    commonsense99
    4 years ago

    who are you trying to protect? the missionary’s?

    yamsar
    yamsar
    4 years ago

    They aren’t too far off in the way they dressed up. Hasidism very closely resembles Christianity. A careful comparison study reveal some of the basic tenets of Christianity in the Hasidic movement

    hmmmm
    hmmmm
    4 years ago

    VIN in this case I believe it’s a a mitzva to show the faces of these people. These people will go to the next Jewish community perhaps thousands of miles away. People need to know who they are. This why we have you as the orthodox website, so all can be informed of matters important to us, not silly shtisem about who knows what.

    4 years ago

    Too bad Meir Kahane isn’t still with us.

    4 years ago

    Ironically Rabbi Levi Notik is also a messianic Yid who just so happens to work for a more prestigious organization called Chabad. To a certain extent I’m happy that at least David Costello is open about his beliefs so at least people know where he stands, unlike Chabad who believe in their own Messiach but pretend not to.

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    4 years ago

    Yes. People are allowed to practice their religion. They are allowed to preach.

    ayinglefunadorf
    ayinglefunadorf
    4 years ago

    Whats news here? Many frumme are convinced that Trump is a Messiah. The Evangelist voted 97% for Trump.

    takeittothem
    takeittothem
    4 years ago

    why worry so much? don’t jews, no matter how far away from Judaism, know that j is not part of the religion. or am I wrong?

    4 years ago

    Isn’t Chabad also a messianic cult

    Speaksoftly
    Speaksoftly
    4 years ago

    Why during these days of sefira, do people evidence so much sinas chinum? If Chabad does not suit your outlook, fine. But do not disparage their tremendous efforts on behalf of kvoid shomayim. Litvaks, chasidim , YU, etc. whatever your flavor – to antisemites, you are all the same. So stop judging everyone else, judge ourselves first. Perhaps if we did, we would have no fear of missionaries because everyone would want to join us.

    4 years ago

    I agree 100% with #11 and #13 , in response to PaulinSaudi, with his gentile perspective. PaulinSaudi is a provocateur, who loves to needle people on this site, especially from his Christian perspective. Why doesn’t he needle the Saudi authorities where he lives? In other words, shouldn’t he practice what he preaches?

    4 years ago

    vin what happened to the 45 comments that were here….. are you guys censoring yourselves

    YehielKalish
    YehielKalish
    4 years ago

    What this article proves to me is that the Chicago orthodox community needs to setup a counter-missionary organization that is staffed by rabbanim and volunteers that are specifically trained how to theologically debunk missionaries so that they can bring back non-orthodox Jews that have converted to Christianity because of Jews for Jesus and the like back home to Judaism.

    4 years ago

    I have been following these posts and I guess the Chabadnikim dont have any answers to these comments.