The synagogue has a Facebook page, Twitter account and website and has given itself the tagline “Making Disciples of Yeshua and Torah in Chicago.”
A Messianic couple who previously disguised themselves as Orthodox Jews are now running a new Messianic synagogue in Chicago focused on targeting Orthodox Jews, the missionary investigation NGO Beyneynu revealed Thursday.
The couple, David Costello and Rivkah Costello (the latter formerly Rivkah Weber), had been exposed in a 2019 report by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, which revealed the two had dressed in typical Orthodox attire and attended a synagogue in the West Rogers Park neighborhood. Costello had even worked at a kosher supermarket.
At the time, rumors had circulated that the two were secretly Christian missionaries, something they confirmed to JTA and admitted that they had become involved in the local Jewish community in order to spread Messianic beliefs.
“We want Jewish people to recognize Yeshua as Moshiach and as a Jewish Messiah,” Costello told JTA in a phone interview in 2019, using the Hebrew words for Jesus and the Messiah.
Regardless, the two claimed to be sincere in their Jewish beliefs and said that though they never denied their Messianic faith, they fully observe the halachot of Orthodox Judaism.
It was later revealed that the two had previously infiltrated the Jewish communities in Flatbush and Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York.
Despite this, a Beyneynu investigation has revealed that, whatever their practices may be, the couple are in no way halachically Jewish.
The investigation has made detailed inquiries to the couple’s families, specifically David’s, as Rivkah has at least claimed to not be Jewish but rather undergoing the conversion process. The details surrounding this are unclear, such as the identity of the beit din or rabbi involved, but one neighbor had told Beyneynu the rabbi was affiliated with Yeshiva University.
According to the investigation, Costello, born in 1981, comes from a long line of Catholics that date back through multiple generations, corroborated by Catholic Church records.
The couple still lives in Chicago, though have been ostracized from their synagogue. Now, however, they have launched a new one, Ahavas Chinam. This synagogue, also registered as a Jewish nonprofit, is registered to an address on N. Richmond Street.
The synagogue has a Facebook page, Twitter account and website and has given itself the tagline “Making Disciples of Yeshua and Torah in Chicago.”