Jonathan Cahn
Jonathan David Cahn is an American Messianic rabbi, author, and novelist known for his debut novel The Harbinger. He is the founder and leader of the Beth Israel Worship Center in Wayne, New Jersey. His ministry weaves together contemporary American politics with right-wing Christian beliefs and the text of the Christian Bible. He is a controversial figure among Christians, Jews, and secular historians.
Personal life
Born in New York State, Cahn was raised in a Jewish family, the son of a Holocaust refugee, and attended the synagogue frequently. Aged 20, after a near-death experience, he converted to Messianic Judaism. He graduated from the State University of New York at Purchase. Cahn started "Hope of the World Ministries", an international outreach of evangelism and compassion projects for the needy and currently is the president of the organization. He is married to Brazilian Renata and they have three children.Ministry
Cahn is the head of the Beth Israel Worship Center congregation whose "liturgy focuses on Jesus as Savior." The group had been located in Garfield, New Jersey, throughout the 1990s but moved to Wayne, New Jersey, in 2008. Their arrival in Wayne was viewed with suspicion by local Jewish clergy: Messianism is considered a form of Evangelical Christianity by most mainstream Christian denominations and all movements of Judaism and frequently proselytizes to Jews. With the arrival of Cahn's group, the YM-YWHA of North Jersey held a counter-missionary event with Jews for Judaism. Cahn told reporters that "the congregation has no intention of 'targeting' the Jewish community. However, anybody is welcome at the center."Focused on end times prophecy, Cahn has said that the United States is "on the wrong path" due to the prevalence of abortion in [the United States|abortion], the pursuit of gay rights, and the perceived decline in the public role of religion. He has cast President Donald Trump as a heroic and biblical figure and has attended Trump's Mar-a-Lago resort with other activists. Later, he claimed that President Joe Biden had put the United States under "demonic possession" for lighting up the White House in LGBTQ Pride rainbow colors.