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The Ancient Scriptures and the Modern Jew is a learned work of biblical interpretation and religious apologetics, written to bring the Hebrew Bible into conversation with Jewish life in the modern age. David Baron examines prophecy, messianic expectation, rabbinic tradition, and the spiritual condition of Israel with a style that is earnest, exegetical, and polemically courteous. Situated within late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Hebrew Christian literature, the book seeks to demonstrate continuity between the ancient Scriptures and Christian claims about the Messiah. Baron, born into a Jewish family in the Russian Empire and later a convert to Christianity, wrote from the unusual position of one deeply formed by Jewish learning yet committed to evangelical faith. As cofounder of the Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel, he devoted his career to addressing Jewish readers and interpreting Judaism for Christians. His personal history of migration, conversion, and missionary scholarship clearly informs the book's urgency and tone. This volume is recommended to readers interested in Jewish-Christian relations, messianic prophecy, and the history of evangelical engagement with Judaism. Though marked by its missionary context, it remains a significant document for understanding how Scripture, identity, and modernity were debated across religious boundaries.