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SACRED TEXTS (THE WORD OF GOD)
Table of Contents:
SECTION 1: THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK (FAITH AND
REASON)
AND THE CONSEQUENCES OF BIBLICAL
FUNDAMENTALISM
· FUNDAMENTALISM
· ANTI-MODERNISM
· ANTI-SEMITISM
SECTION 2: SOME KEY BIBLICAL TEXTS
I. On the Divinity of Jesus
II. The Essence of Christianity
III. Major Corpus of Biblical Laws
IV. On Forbidden Food and Dietary Laws
V. Sexual Ethic
VI. Women
VII. Slaves
VIII. Political Theology (attitude toward governments and
rulers)
IX. On War and other forms of violence
X. Religion and the Economy (Business Ethic and Social
Justice)
XI. Nationalism/Patriotism versus Universalism
XII. Idolatry and Forbidden gods and religions
SECTION 3: TEXTS FROM THE KORAN
SECTION 1: THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
“Man cannot live by the bread of science and politics alone; he
also needs the vitamins of ethics and morals, faith and hope,
love and security, comfort and attention in the face of death and
misfortune, a feeling and experience that as a person he matters
infinitely, and assurance that he is not immediately ‘forgotten’
or even annihilated when he dies. These are the elements that
religion tries to offer… Religion makes a contribution in man’s
search for identity and security... Invisible, unnoticed and even
unofficially, the religious traditions of Africa contain the only
lasting potentialities for a basis, a foundation and a direction of
life for African societies.”
John S. Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy. London:
Heinemann, 1989, 2nd edition; p.270.
But what kind of Religion?
MACHT VERDUMMT
(Power makes you stupid)
(Nietzsche)
Is ours a stupid religion?
“Più Sai Più Sei”
“He who knows one knows none” (Max Müller)
THE DANGER OF ANTHROPOMORPHISM
Mortal men believe that gods are begotten, and that they have
the dress, voice,
and body of mortals...
If Oxen, horses, or lions had hands with which to sketch and
fashion works of art as men do.
Then horses would draw the forms of gods like horses, oxen like
oxen, and they would each make their gods’ bodies similar in
frame to the bodies that they themselves possess.
Indeed, the Ethiopians claim that their gods are snub-nosed and
black;
the Thracians, that theirs are blue-eyed and red-headed. ...
One god there is! Greatest among gods and humankind,
in no way like mortals in body or in the thought of his mind.
In his entirety, he sees;
in his entirety, he thinks;
in his entirety, he hears.
Always in the same place, he remains, moving not at all; it is
not fitting that he should shift about now here and, then,
elsewhere. But holding aloof from toil, he sets all things
aquiver with the thought of his mind.
(Xenophanes, ca. 560-478 B.C.E.)
Stanley Rosen, ed., The Examined Life: Readings From Western
Philosophers From Plato to Kant. (New York: Random House,
2000); pp.6-7.
FAITH AND REASON: THE INDISPENSABLE ROLE OF
CRITICAL THINKING
KORAN
The Koran begins (after the Exordium) with the following
words:
“This book is not to be doubted. It is a guide for the righteous,
who have faith in the unseen and are steadfast in prayer…
as for the unbelievers… grievous punishment awaits them.”
(Surah 2:2)
THE BIBLE (2Timothy 3,1-17):
“…All scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching,
for refutation, for correction, and for training in righteousness,
so that one who belongs to God may be competent, equipped for
every good work.”
· 1Peter 3, 13-17 and 2 Peter 1, 1-11:
“Now who is going to harm you if you are enthusiastic for what
is good? ...
Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you
for a reason for your hope, but do it with gentleness and
reverence, keeping your conscience clear so that when you are
maligned, those who defame your good conduct in Christ may
themselves be put to shame.” (1Peter 3, 13-17)
“Make every effort to supplement
your faith with virtue,
virtue with knowledge,
knowledge with self-control,
self-control with endurance,
endurance with devotion,
devotion with mutual affection,
mutual affection with love…”
(2 Peter 1, 1-11)
THE ALLEGORY STRATEGY
IN THE READING OF SACRED TEXTS
Celsus’ critique of Christianity and Judaism
“Christians hold many irrational opinions, and they are upset
when a logical investigation of their doctrines shows
inconsistencies and difficulties. They simply cannot think
critically. They despise philosophy and logic, and claim that
their holy scriptures lead them to ultimate truth. Christians
believe a myth that God wrote their commandments. Both the
Jewish Scriptures and the Christian teachings are full of myths.
Their entire scriptures both of law, the prophets, and about
Jesus are full of myths. The myth among us that Plato had a
virgin birth was rejected by us, realizing that some overly
ambitious followers who did not know him created the myth.
Greeks do not believe Greek fables, but Jews and Christians
believe theirs to be actual history. Against all history and
reason, the Christians are determined to believe their myths.
The Bible is replete with ludicrous legends and myths that are
allegorized by Christians to save face and the embarrassment
they give when taken literally. .Many biblical stories are so
ridiculous that they take refuge in allegories. All wise men
know that the allegory game is an admission of a rather stupid
story. Mosaic cosmology is contrary to science. The creation
periods of “days” before days existed shows as lack of both
logic and science. Christians realize that Moses is incorrect, but
hide it by means of allegorical interpretations. Christians
believe that the world is not even 10,000 years old because they
rely, not on science and logic, but Moses’ books. Neither Jew
nor Christian has ever invented anything in science….Like all
quacks they (Christians) gather a crowd of slaves, children,
women and idlers. I speak bitterly about this because I feel
bitterly. When we are invited to the Mysteries the masters use
another tone. They say, Come to us you who are of clean hands
and pure speech, you who are unstained by crime, who have a
good conscience towards God, who have done justly and lived
uprightly. The Christians say, Come to us you who are sinners,
you who are fools or children, you who are miserable, and you
shall enter into the kingdom of Heaven: the rogue, the thief, the
burglar, the poisoner, the despoiler of temples and tombs, these
are their proselytes... Jesus, they say, was sent to save sinners;
was he not sent to help those who have kept themselves free
from sin? They pretend that God will save the unjust man if he
repents and humbles himself. The just man who has held steady
from the cradle in the ways of virtue He will not look upon. He
pours scorn upon the exorcists; who were clearly in league with
the demons themselves – and upon the excesses of the itinerant
and undisciplined prophets who roam through cities and camps
and commit to everlasting fire cities and lands and their
inhabitants… Above all Christians are disloyal, and every
church is an illicit collegium, an insinuation deadly at any time,
but especially so under Marcus Aurelius. Why cannot Christians
attach themselves to the great philosophic and political
authorities of the world? A properly understood worship of gods
and demons is quite compatible with a purified monotheism, and
they might as well give up the mad idea of winning the
authorities over to their faith, or of hoping to attain anything
like universal agreement on divine things."
(From Origen’s “Contra Celsum”)
· “Once you have learned how to ask questions - relevant and
appropriate and substantial questions - you have learned how to
learn and no one can keep you from learning whatever you want
or need to know.”
(Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner)
“What is most thought provoking in our thought-provoking time
is that we are still not thinking. We are still not thinking,
although the
state of the world is becoming constantly more thought-
provoking.”
(Martin Heidegger, Was Heisst Denken?)
It is hard to suppress a certain disgust when contemplating
men’s action
upon the world stage. For one finds, in spite of apparent
wisdom in detail that
everything, taken as a whole, is interwoven with
stupidity,
childish vanity,
often with childish viciousness
and destructiveness.
In the end, one does not know what kind of conception one
should have of
our species which is so conceited about its superior qualities.
(Immanuel Kant, Idea for a Universal History with
Cosmopolitan Intent, 1784.
in Carl J. Friedrich, The Philosophy of Kant. Immanuel Kant’s
Moral and Political Writings.
New York: The Modern Library, 1993; p.129).
· “Normally persons talk about other people’s religions as they
are,
and about their own as it ought to be.”
(Wilfred Cantwell Smith, 1962).
“We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing,
while others judge us by what we have already done.”
(Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)
“THE ONLY THING I KNOW IS THAT I KNOW THAT I DO
NOT KNOW.”
(SOCRATES).
“THE UNEXAMINED LIFE IS NOT WORTH LIVING.”
(Socrates in Plato’s The Apology).
“Cogito Ergo Sum” (I think therefore I am)
René Descartes
“Reason is the Substance of the Universe”
Hegel
“THE UNEXAMINED RELIGIONIS NOT WORTH
BELIEVING.”
(Mutombo)
· “Uncertainty, in the presence of vivid hopes and fears, is
painful, but must be endured if we wish to live without the
support of comforting fairy tales. It is not good to forget the
questions that philosophy asks, or to persuade ourselves that we
have found indubitable answers to them. To teach how to live
without certainty, and yet without being paralyzed by
hesitation, is perhaps the chief thing that philosophy, in our
age, can still do for those who study it.”
(Bertrand Russell).
A succint definition of Philosophy of religion (by Edgar S.
Brightman):
“Philosophy of religion is an attempt to discover by rational
interpretation of religion
and its relations to other types of experience, the truth of
religious beliefs and
the value of religious attitudes and practices.”
5 Tasks of Philosophy of religion according to William J.
Abraham
(1) to clarify the central concepts of religion,
(2) to examine the internal consistency of religious concepts,
(3) to scrutinize the philosophical presupposition of faith
statements;
(4) to examine the philosophical presuppositions and
consistencies of statements
made by apologists or assailants of religion.
(5) to explore the relationship between religion and other areas
of life;
Philosophy of religion provides religion with the power of
critical thinking
and self-examination.
In so doing it helps religion to become
1. More Credible
2. More Authentic
3. More Meaningful
4. More Religious
(by overcoming Anthropomorphism, and man-made rules)
5. More mature (less childish, less stupid, less tyrannical, less
fanatical)
6. Coherent (avoid unnecessary contradictions)
7. Reasonable
8. To distinguish what is essential in religion from superficial
paraphernalia
9. To curb fanaticism and religious violence (to make religion
more divine and more humane)
10. To Defend the raison d’etre of religion with solid arguments
ONLY ONE WAY OF SALVATION?
A. THE CHRISTIAN PERSPECTIVE
Jesus said to him:
“I am the Way, and the truth, and the life.
No one comes to the Father except through me.
If you know me, you will know my Father also.” (John 14, 6-7)
And Jesus said to his disciples: “Go into the whole world
and proclaim the gospel to every creature.
Whoever believes and is baptised will be saved;
Whoever does not believe will be condemned.” (Mark 16,14-18)
“In Christendom Heresy was prosecuted as a crime that
undermined the religious foundation of society.”
(Paul E. Capetz, God: A Brief History, p.43).
“Do not invoke the names of other gods; do not let them be
heard on your lips.”
(Ex.23,13)
“Whoever sacrifices to any god, other than the Lord alone, shall
be devoted to destruction.”
(Exodus 22:19, and Deut.13: 1-17)
Deuteronomy 13: 6-11 (on idol worship)
If anyone secretly entices you - even if it is your brother, your
father’s son or your mother’s son, or your own son or daughter,
or the wife you embrace, or your most intimate friend - saying,
“Let us go worship other gods,” whom neither you nor your
ancestors have known, any of the gods of the peoples that are
around you, whether near you or far away from you, from one
end of the earth to the other, you must not yield to or heed any
such persons.
Show them no pity or compassion and do not shield them. But
you shall surely kill them; your own hand shall be first against
them to execute them, and afterwards the and of all the people.
Stone them to death for trying to turn you away from the Lord
your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the
house of slavery. Then all Israel shall hear and be afraid, and
never again do any such wickedness.
“Then God spoke all these words:
I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of
Egypt, out of the house of slavery;
you shall have no other gods before me.
You shall not make for yourself an idol,
whether in the form of anything that is in heaven above,
or that is on the earth beneath,
- or that is in the water under the earth.
You shall not bow down to them or worship them;
for I am a jealous God, punishing children for the iniquity of
parents,
to the third and the fourth generation of those who reject me,
but showing steadfast love to the thousandth generation of those
who love me
and keep my commandments.”
(Ex.20,1-6).
“The heathen in his blindness bows down to wood and stone.”
Psalms 115:
Why should the nations say, “where is their God?”
Our God is in heaven; whatever God wills is done.
Their idols are silver and gold,
The work of human hands
They have mouths but do not speak,
Eyes but do not see.
They have ears but do not hear,
Noses but do not smell.
They have hands but do not feel,
Feet but do not walk,
And no sound rises from their throats.
Their makers shall be like them, all who trust in them.
The house of Israel trusts in the Lord
Who is their help and shield.
“Because of Jesus Christ, Christianity understands itself as the
absolute religion, intended for all men, which cannot recognize
any other religion beside itself as of equal right… This
pluralism is a greater threat and a reason for greater unrest for
Christianity than for any other religion. For no other religion –
not even Islam – maintains so absolutely that it is the religion,
the one and only valid revelation of the one living God as does
the Christian religion. The fact of the pluralism of religions,
which endures and still from time to time becomes virulent and
even after a history of 2000 years, must therefore be the
greatest scandal and the greatest vexation for Christianity.”
(Karl Rahner, “Christianity and the Non-Christian Religions” in
Theological Investigations, vol.5.; Baltimore: Helicon, 1966;
pp.118,116).
“It has been axiomatic to Christians that Christianity is the true
religion, and that others are at best varyingly less true. But this
axiom, given the initial perceptual grid, has generated
inevitable perplexities in which the Christian theology of
religions has become hopelessly entangled. If God is the God of
all humanity, why is the true religion, the right approach to
God, confined to a single strand of human history, so that it has
been unavailable to the great majority of the thousands of
millions of human beings who have lived and died from the
earliest days until now? If God is the Creator and Father of all,
can God have provided true religion only for a chosen minority?
Why, within God’s providence, has humanity’s religious life
taken the pluralistic form which history shows us?”
John Hick, “Foreword” to Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s “The
Meaning and End of Religion” (Minneapolis: Fortress Press,
1991); pp.v-vii.
B. THE ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE
“The only true faith in God’s sight is Islam.” (Surah 3:19)
“He that chooses a religion other than Islam, it will not be
accepted for him,
and in the world to come he will be one of the lost.” (Surah
3:85)
Qur’an, Surah 9:1-20
Proclaim a woeful punishment to the unbelievers….
When the sacred months are over slay the idolaters wherever
you find them.
Arrest them, besiege then, and lie in ambush everywhere for
them
For idolaters are ignorant men… evil is what they do…
Do you fear them?
Surely God is more deserving of your fear if you are true
believers.
Make war on them: God will chastise them at your hands and
humble them…
Those who have embraced the Faith, and left their homes; and
fought for God’s cause with their wealth and with their persons,
are held in higher regard by God.
Qur’an, Surah 5:24-40
Those that make war against God and his apostle and spread
disorder in the land shall be slain or crucified or have their
hands and feet cut off on alternate sides, or be banished from
the land. They shall be held up to shame in this world and
sternly punished in the hereafter: except those that repent before
you reduce them. For you must know that God is forgiving and
merciful.
Believers, have fear of God and seek the right path to Him.
Fight valiantly for His cause, so that you may triumph.
As for the unbelievers…woeful punishment awaits them.
As for the man or woman who is guilty of theft, cut off their
hands to punish them for their crimes. That is the punishment
enjoined by God. God is mighty and wise…Did you not know
that God has sovereignty over the heavens and the earth? He
punishes whom He will and forgives whom He pleases. God has
power over all things.
ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM
From Farid Esack, Qur’an Liberation and Pluralism:
An Islamic perspective on interreligious
solidarity against oppression.
(Oxford: one world,1997) p.xi.
The Muslim scholar Farid warns us against the distortion of
Islam through the imposition of a Christian theological
category. However, he points out that there are some tendencies
in Islam that have the characteristics of fundamentalism.
He identifies 7 major characteristics of “Islamic
Fundamentalism.”
Islamic fundamentalism, as popularized in much of the Western
media, represents a stereotype with pejorative and disparaging
connotations.
It is often sweeping in its generalization and insensitive to the
many nuances in the world of contemporary Islam. However, in
contemporary Islamic discourse there is a tendency that can
appropriately be described as fundamentalism (and which
mutatis mutandis has striking similarities with Christian
Fundamentalism).
7 major characteristics of Islamic Fundamentalism:
1. A denial of any virtue in non-Islam;
2. enmity towards all who reject fundamentalist views as people
who have chosen Evil against Good;
3. A commitment to the establishment of an Islamic state
wherein the sovereignty of God, juxtaposed against popular
sovereignty, would be supreme.
4. A belief in the necessity of enforcing the shari’ah
as fundamentalists understand it to have been practised in the
Muhammadan era in Medina;
5. A commitment to strict religious practice;
6. A commitment to observance of the text
(literal reading of the Koran)
7. An unhistorical view of Islam as capable of permanently
solving all the problems of humankind.
Christian Fundamentalism
"Jesus Christ is the only way of salvation".
Accept the whole Bible as the infallible "word of God".
Fundamentalists tend toward a literalist reading of the Sacred
Texts. A survey by the Gallup organization in 1980 found that
40% of the American public claimed to believe that the Bible is
the “actual word of God and is to be taken literally, word for
word.”
Malise Ruthven, Fundamentalism: The Search for Meaning.
(Oxford University Press, 2004);
“To look at American religion and to overlook Evangelicalism
and Fundamentalism would be comparable to scanning the
American physical landscape and missing the Rocky
Mountains… As extreme and outdated as the Evangelical model
of understanding other religions might seem, the Evangelical
voice must be heard. What might appear as extreme in this voice
flows from a deep concern for what Evangelicals deem to be the
heart of Christianity. To dismiss Evangelical attitudes as
outdated is simply to ignore the fact that these attitudes do
represent a strong, and an increasingly louder, voice within the
Christian population.
Paul F. Knitter, No Other Name? A Critical Survey of Christian
Attitudes Towards the World Religions. (New York: Orbis
Books, 1985)
Because of its belief
in “Manifest Destiny” ideology,
in literal reading of the Bible,
in the Apocalyptic Armageddon war,
and its opposition to science,
and to Women’s right in the Church or in the society at large,
Because of its support to arms industry,
its glorification of the US military and militarism,
and its support of US wars against foreign nations,
and US economic exploitation of poor nations,
Because of its “uncritical” and somehow immature approach to
moral values, its love for weapons and war, its impact on the
environment, its baleful role in US foreign policy toward other
nations,
America’s religiosity is a problem,
a major source of instability and violence in the world.
American fundamentalists are
- a headache, a thorn in the flesh of the bien-pensant liberals,
- the subject of bemused concern to ‘Old Europeans’ who have
experienced too many real catastrophes to yearn for
Armageddon,
- They inconvenience women, and oppose scientific progress
But they are not a danger only to America, they are also a
danger to the whole World and to the planet earth itself.
- On a planetary level they are selfish, greedy, and stupid,
damaging the environment by the excessive use of energy and
lobbying against environmental controls. What is the point of
saving the planet, they argue, if Jesus is arriving tomorrow?
Malise Ruthven, Fundamentalism: The Search for Meaning.
(Oxford University Press, 2004); pp. 59; 1-34; 216-217.
THE FUNDAMENTALISM MOVEMENT (1910-2004)
Fundamentalism is reactionary, it is the need to return to the
“good old days.”
It is guided by “fear” of loosing control with the rise of
governments where secular rulers are independent from the
diktat of religious leaders. It stands as a reaction to the rise of
democracy, Multiculturalism, individual freedom, technology
(industrial revolution, modern science), Marxism, socialism
and communism, and feminism or the emancipation of women
and sexual revolution.
Some fundamentalists are people who are alienated or excluded
from competition in the new world. Others are merely guided by
their religious passion, or by the will to power. But others view
themselves as the most enlightened and lovers of God.
In the recent decades, fundamentalists have added POLITICAL
ACTIVISM to their agendas. They want to rule the world and
bring it back to what they regard as “order” and spiritual values,
decency, and dignity.
Although associated with the South, the poor and uneducated
people, Fundamentalism had its key roots at Princeton Seminary
where conservative Presbyterians resistant to the theory of
biological evolution and innovations in biblical interpretation
defended the literal truth of the Bible and such doctrines as
Jesus’s virgin birth and Resurrection.
From England came “dispensational premillennialism,” which
divided human history into biblically defined epochs or
“dispensations” and anticipated the return of Jesus to inaugurate
the millennium, followed by the cataclysmic end of time. These
doctrines were spread nationwide by a network of evangelists
and Bible institutes centered on Dwight L. Moody (1837-99)
and his Chicago institute and, after 1876, through an annual
interdenominational conference series at Niagara, New York.
16th century: Protestant reformation and Council of Trent
18th century: collapse of Theocracies, Rise of Democracy and
Human rights movements
1776: American Revolution
1789: French Revolution
19th century: Industrial revolution (triumph of modern science)
and rise of Evolutionism
1859: Publication of Charles Darwin’s The Evolution of Species
1876-1900: Bible conferences held by many Christian
conservatives
throughout the USA
1910: publication of “The Fundamentals” (12 volumes)
1925: The “1925 Scopes trial” (in Dayton, Tennessee).
The “1925 Scopes trial” constitute the most sensational
expression of early fundamentalism, in which Fundamentalists
successfully but embarrassingly defended a state law outlawing
the teaching of evolution in public schools. This occurred in
Dayton, Tennessee
The “fundamental beliefs of Protestantism”:
(according to the document “the Fundamentals”):
1. The inerrancy of the Bible
2. Creationism or the direct ex nihilo creation of the world, and
humanity (and rejection of the Darwinian theory of Evolution)
3. the authenticity of miracles
4. the virgin birth of Jesus
5. Jesus’ crucifixion
6. Jesus’ bodily resurrection
7. the substitutionary atonement (the doctrine that Christ died to
redeem the sins of humanity)
8.(for some but not all believers) Jesus’ imminent return to
judge and rule over the world
I must add to this list:
9.
LITERALISM: literalistic reading of the Bible , miracles and
prophecies.
10.
SOLA FIDE
11.
SOLA SCRIPTURA
12.
EXCLUSIVISM: Salvation only through Christ
(Discrimination, exclusion, elimination)
13.
“the arrogance of faith” and delusional “self-righteousness.”
14.
LIBIDO DOMINANDI (obsession to control the lives of others)
15.
SEXISM AND PATRIARCHY
16.
ANTI-MODERNISM, ANTI-INTELLECTUALISM.
17.
ANTI-ENVIRONMENTALISM
18.
DUALISM AND MANICHEAN VIEW OF THE WORLD
19.
THEOCRATIC TENDENCIES (opposition to Democracy and
Human Rights)
20.
Tendency to support problematic social and political practices:
- Overly patriotic: Jingoism, narrow nationalism, imperialism.
- supports death penalty (while condemning abortion)
- supports militarism and imperialistic wars;
- supports capitalism
FUNDAMENTALISM as a term is a product of Protestantism.
PROTESTANT FUNDAMENTALISM is the original form.
Later on it was applied to Catholics, Jews, and recently to
Muslims, Hindus, etc.
PROTESTANT FUNDAMENTALISM is opposed to
- MODERNITY
- The rise of Catholics, Jews, women and Minorities
(they think they have lost America)
CATHOLIC FUNDAMENTALISM is a reaction to
- PROTESTANTISM
- MODERNITY
- DEMOCRACY, FRENCH REVOLUTION, AMERICAN
REVOLUTION
- VATICAN II (openness to other religions)
- FREEDOM FROM THE HIERARCHY
- LIBERATION THEOLOGY (economically
conservative, opposition to the poor)
ANTI-MODERNISM AND CATHOLIC FUNDAMENTALISM
18th - 20th century, until 1965 (from Pius VI to Paul VI)
The Church rejecting Democracy and Human Rights, especially
1) Freedom of conscience,
2) Freedom of thought
3) Religious Freedom
4) Liberty of Press
5) the principle of separation between Church and State
6) Ordination of Women
As
1) Madness
2) False and absurd principle (Error)
3) contrary to Reason
4) contrary to God’s Revelation
5) negation of Truth
6) DANGEROUS ERROR
PUNISHMENT
(Church’s response to “Error”)
1. Excommunication
2. Index
3. Inquisition (Torture, Burning at stake)
Inquisition (12th-17th century - 21st century),
later it was called Holy Office (1908-1965) and finally
Congregation for the doctrine of Faith (since 1965)
4. Persecution of Heretics
5. CRUSADES against non-Christians
6. Burning women (accused of witchcraft)
7. Burning intellectuals, scientists, free-thinkers
ANTI-MODERNISM (18th-20th CENTURY)
The Church’s opposition to Science, Democracy and Human
Rights.
Pius VI (1775-1799) condemned the French Declaration of
Human Rights
Gregory XVI (1831-1846) condemned the French Declaration of
Human Rights
Pope Pius IX (1846-1878) and Pius X (1903-1914): Syllabus
Errorum (1864; 1907).
The Vatican condemnations of
* a Syllabus of Errors in 1864,
* Americanism in 1899,
* Modernism in 1907
CONTEXT:
1776: American Revolution and Declaration of Independence
1789: French Revolution and declaration of the rights of man
and citizen.
1859: Darwin’s book on Evolution
1870: Infallibility of the Pope proclaimed as a dogma
ANTI-MODERNISM (SYLLABUS OF ERRORS)
The Church condemned the following as “enemies of God,
religion, and humanity itself”
- Kantian philosophy: Enlightenment, Rationalism, and
criticism,
- separation of church and state in France,
- Democracy,
- Human Rights, especially religious freedom
- Emancipation of women
- Galileo and Modern Science
- and even state-sponsored solutions to poverty.
Before Vatican II, Pius VI (1775-1799) regarded the French
declaration of the rights of man and citizens of 1789 as madness
and condemned it in 1791.
He declared in his document Quod aliquantum that the principle
of liberty as declared by the French charter of human rights was
contrary to reason and to God’s Revelation.
Continuing in the same spirit, in 1832, Pope Gregory XVI
condemned liberty of conscience as
“the false, absurd, mad principle” (deliramentum), “the most
contagious of errors.”
He added: “to this error (liberty of conscience) is attached
liberty of press, the most dangerous liberty, an execrable
liberty, which can never inspire sufficient horror.”
In his encyclical Mirari vos (in which he condemned the
theology professed by Félicité Robert de Lamennais (1782-
1854) and other French progressive theologians who asked the
church to defend freedom and some principles of French
declaration of human rights), Gregory XVI condemned this
notion of liberty as
the “evil-smelling spring of indifferentism” from which flowed
the erroneous and absurd opinion - or rather, derangement - that
freedom of conscience must be asserted and vindicated for
everybody.
He added: This most pestilential error opens the door to the
complete and immoderate liberty of opinions, which works such
widespread harm both in church and state. Some people
outrageously maintain that some advantage derives from it for
religion.
Pope Pius IX (1846-1878)
In 1864, Pope Pius IX also condemned religious liberty in his
Syllabus Errorum as one of the grave errors of modern
liberalism.
The Catholic Church was not alone in this opposition to human
rights.
As Abba Hillel Silver pointed out, “Religion was not only tardy
in championing human rights; at times it was actually retarding
and reactionary.” Likewise Eric Weingartner observed that the
“Christian church has not historically been in alliance with the
pioneers of human rights, whatever their tradition.”
Syllabus
- From “syllabos” meaning, "collection”
· it is the name given to two series of propositions containing
· modern religious errors condemned respectively by
· Pius IX (1864) and Pius X (1907).
Through the Syllabus, the Popes intended to bring together
under the form of a Constitution the chief errors of the time and
to condemn them.
The Syllabus of Errors (80 theses) Condemned by Pope Pius IX
Table of Contents
The general contents of the Syllabus are summed up in the
headings of the ten paragraphs, under which, the 80 theses are
grouped.
They are:
1.Pantheism, Naturalism, Absolute Rationalism (1-7);
2. Moderate Rationalism (8-14);
3. Indifferentism and false Tolerance in Religious matters (15-
18);
4. Socialism, Communism, Secret Societies, Bible Societies,
Liberal Clerical Associations (reference is made to three
Encyclicals and two Allocutions of the pope, in which these
tendencies are condemned),
5. Errors regarding the Church and its rights (19-38);
6. Errors on the State and its Relation to the Church (39-55);
7. Errors on Natural and Christian Ethics (56-64);
8. Errors on Christian Marriage (65-74);
9. Errors on the Temporal Power of the Pope (75-76);
10. Errors in Connection with Modern Liberalism (77-80).
Here is a sample of what the Catholic Church rejected as
“errors.”
1) 15. Every man is free to embrace and profess that religion
which, guided by the light of reason, he shall consider true.
(Allocution "Maxima quidem," June 9, 1862; Damnatio
"Multiplices inter," June 10, 1851).
2) 16. Man may, in the observance of any religion whatever,
find the way of eternal salvation, and arrive at eternal salvation.
(Encyclical "Qui pluribus," Nov. 9, 1846).
3) 17. Good hope at least is to be entertained of the eternal
salvation of all those who are not at all in the true Church of
Christ.
Encyclical "Quanto conficiamur," Aug. 10, 1863, etc.
4) 18. Protestantism is nothing more than another form of the
same true Christian religion, in which form it is given to please
God equally as in the Catholic Church.
-- Encyclical "Noscitis," Dec. 8, 1849.
5) 24. The Church has not the power of using force, nor has she
any temporal power, direct or indirect.
-- Apostolic Letter "Ad Apostolicae," Aug. 22, 1851.
6) 55. The Church ought to be separated from the State, and the
State from the Church.
Allocution "Acerbissimum," Sept. 27, 1852.
8) 78. Hence it has been wisely decided by law, in some
Catholic countries, that persons coming to reside therein shall
enjoy the public exercise of their own peculiar worship.
-- Allocution "Acerbissimum," Sept. 27, 1852.
9) on “Religious Freedom”
79. Moreover, it is false that the civil liberty of every form of
worship, and the full power, given to all, of overtly and publicly
manifesting any opinions whatsoever and thoughts, conduce
more easily to corrupt the morals and minds of the people, and
to propagate the pest of indifferentism.
- Allocution "Nunquam fore," Dec. 15, 1856.
CHRISTIANITY AND ANTI-SEMITISM
(The impact of Fundamentalist reading of the Bible on Jews)
WHAT THE NEW TESTAMENT SAYS ABOUT JEWS
1) Rom 11: 28
2) Mt 27, 1-44 (Focus on Mt 27, 1-2 and 27, 22-25)
3) John18, 29-40 and 19, 1-18
4) Acts 2: 22-23
5) Acts 3: 12 - 17
6) Mt 5: 17 (Mt chapters 5, 6, and 7): fulfillment doctrine
7) Mt 23: 1-38: mocking the Jewish religious leaders
8) John 8: 31-59
9) Rom 3: 21-28; Gal 2: 15-21 and Gal 3:10
10) Acts 4: 8-12
Saint John Chrysostom (344-407 A.D.) declared:
“Jews are the most miserable of all men.... lustful, rapacious,
greedy, perfidious bandits.... inveterate murderers, destroyers,
men possessed by the devil.... whose debauchery and
drunkenness have given them the manners of the pig and the
lusty goat. They know only one thing, to satisfy their gullets,
get drunk, to kill and maim one another.... They have surpassed
the ferocity of wild beasts, for they murder their offspring and
immolate them to the devil.” As to Judaism, symbolized by the
synagogue, it is: an assembly of criminals... a den of thieves...a
cavern of devils, an abyss of perdition.... far from venerating
the synagogue because of the books it contains, hold it in hatred
and aversion for the same reason.... I hate the synagogue
precisely because it has the law and prophets.... I hate the Jews
also because they outrage the law.
Saint Agobard (779-840 A.D.):
“Jews are cursed and covered with malediction, as by a cloak.
The malediction has penetrated them as water in their entrails
and oil in their bones. They are cursed in the city and cursed in
the country, cursed is their coming in and their going out.
Cursed are the fruits of their loins, of their lands, of their
flocks; cursed their cellars, their granaries, their shops, their
food, and the crumbs of their tables.
Martin Luther (16th century)
He declared that Jewish synagogues should be burned and their
books seized, that Jews should be forced to work with their
hands, or better still, be expelled by the princes, and added
these astonishing words:
“They should be forced to hardest labor as handymen of serfs
only; they should not be permitted to hold services; every
Christian should be admonished to deal with them in a merciless
manner; if you suffer, strike them on the jaw; if I had the
power, I would assemble them to prove to us that we Christians
do not worship God, under penalty of having their tongues cut
out through the backs of their necks.”
Throughout history, Jews constantly worry about 3 things:
1. Anti-Semitism
2. Intermarriage,
3. Assimilation
TEN PLAGUES OF JEWISH PERSECUTIONS
1. Slavery in Egypt
2. Assyrians and Exile in Babylonia
3. Greek and Roman colonialism
- Antiochus
- 70 C.E: Jerusalem and its temple destroyed
- 135 (Grand Diapora: Jews dispersed in the Roman empire)
4. Homelessness in Europe (135-1948): Ghetto and distinctive
badge
5. Radical anti-semitic laws (excluding Jews from education,
economic life, and restrictive of their religion)
6. Crusades
7. Persecution in England and France
8.Russian Pogroms
9.Spanish and Portuguese
10. Holocaust
LOCUS OF PERSECUTION (MAJOR EVENTS)
1. Egypt (slavery in Egypt)
2. Assyria and Babylonia (exil, deportation)
3. Hellenistic empire
4. Roman Empire
5. Spain and Portugal
6. Poland
7. France
8. England
9. Russia
10. Germany
A Brief history of Jewish persecution
Homelessness in Europe (135-1948)
- Jewish persecutions under the Byzantines,
- Jewish massacres during the Crusades,
- Jewish expulsions in England (1290),
France (1306),
Spain (1492),
Portugal (1497),
Frankfurt (1614),
and Vienna (1670).
Jewish pogroms in the Ukraine (1648,1768),
Odessa (1871), and throughout Russia, especially after 1881
culminating in Kishinev (1903).
1939-1945: Holocaust (Hitler, Germany)
TEN MAJOR ANTI-SEMITIC ACCUSATIONS
Jews were constantly accused of
1. Deicide
2. Blasphemy and
3. ritual murder.
10 MAJOR ACCUSATIONS :
* 1. Killers of Christ (Deicide people, Christkillers)
They Killed Jesus in the past and continue to kill him in the
Eucharist, and they make a mockery of his Church (Christian
religion):
a) Desecrating the sacred host (Eucharist)
b) Jews continue to torment Christ by piercing and pounding the
sacred bread they steal from Christian churches
* 2. Killers of Christians:
a) “Blood-libel” charge: Jews commit ritual murder of
Christians and use their blood (especially the blood of Christian
children)in their rituals, especially to bake unleavened bread for
their Passover (this medieval charge continued into the 20th
century!)
b) During plague period: Jews have poisoned wells of Christians
* 3. Do not respect the Christian God, the Christian religion,
nor the Christian people.
* 4. Immoral
* 5. Evil sorcery (because they are the children of the devil)
* 6. Greedy (Jews have 2 Gods: Money and the Devil)
* 7. Violent
* 8. Enemies of the State (bad citizens)
* 9. Enemies of Truth and Love
* 10. They carry diseases (and kill Christians)
In other words, essentially they are
Enemies of
- 1. God (Christ)
- 2. Truth,
- 3. Faith (True Religion)
- 4. Love (by killing the God of Love, they killed Love)
- 5. Decency (decent moral values)
- 6. Peace
- 7. Culture (dietary laws, prohibition of sculpture or art)
- 8. Life
- 9. Humanity
-10. The State (Bad Citizens, traitors)
PUNISHMENT
(How Christians punished Jews for their alleged crimes)
=> => By killing the God of love, by rejecting God (Jesus) they
have rejected themselves, and excluded themselves from the
realm of love
1. They are cursed by God, and must be cursed by any good
Christian; by rejecting the God of Love Jews have rejected
themselves.
2. Exclusion from Education and Intellectual life
3. Exclusion from Economic Life
4. Exclusion from Political life (no citizen rights)
5. Exclusion from Legal protection
6. Exclusion from Society (Ghettoization)
7. Exclusion from the realm of religion (burning of Talmud,
construction of synagogues prohibited,…)
8. Exclusion from Humanity (enemy of God the Jew is not fully
human, and deserves to be exterminated)
20 major historical types of Punishment
1. Forced baptism of Jewish Children, and adult forced to
convert to Christian or to live the country
2. Construction of new synagogues prohibited,
3. Burning of the Talmud
4. Jews not permitted to attend schools or universities
5. Jews not permitted to obtain academic degrees.
6. Jews not allowed to hold public office (Synod of Clermont,
535 C.E.); nor to join the Military.
7. Jews not permitted to be plaintiffs or witnesses against
Christians in the courts, 3rd Lateran Council, 1179 C/E., Canon
26.
8. Compulsory ghettos
9. The marking of Jewish clothes with a badge,
10. Prohibition to sell or rent real estate to Jews
11. Jews not permitted to withhold inheritance from descendants
who had accepted Christianity, 3rd Lateran Council, Canon 26.
12. Prohibition of Sunday work, Synod of Szabolcs, 1092 C.E.
13. Heavy Taxes
14. Seizure of Jewish properties (Jews starved to death)
15. Christians not permitted to patronize Jewish doctors,
Trulanic Synod, 692 C.E.
16. Prohibition of intermarriage and of sexual intercourse
between Christians and Jews, Synod of Elvira, 306, C.E.
17. Jews and Christians not permitted to eat together, Synod of
Elvira, 306 C.E.
18. Mockery
19. Expulsion
20.ELIMINATION, EXTERMINATION:
a) Torture
b) Massacre and various pogroms
c) Holocaust
Anti-Semitism and Western religious thought:
2000 years of a symphony of destruction
The Wise Anti-Semite
(by Jean-Paul Sartre)
“There is a disgust for the Jew, just as there is a disgust for the
Chinese or the Negro among certain people…
If a man attributes all or part of his own misfortunes and those
of his country to the presence of Jewish elements in the
community,
if he proposes to remedy this state of affairs
by depriving the Jews of certain of their rights,
by keeping them out of certain economic and social activities,
by expelling them from the country,
by exterminating all of them,
we say that he has anti-Semitic opinions. But anti-Semitism is
more than mere opinion.
“Anti-Semitism is a doctrine that is aimed directly at particular
persons and that seeks to suppress their rights or to exterminate
them.
Anti-Semitism is a free and total choice of oneself,
a comprehensive attitude that one adopts not only toward Jews
but toward men in general, toward history and society;
it is at once and the same time a passion and a conception of the
world.”
Contrary to a widespread opinion, it is not the Jewish character
that provokes anti-Semitism but, rather, it is the anti-Semite
who creates the Jew. The primary phenomenon, therefore, is
anti-Semitism, a regressive social force and a conception
deriving from the prelogical world.
A man may be a good father and a good husband, a
conscientious citizen, highly cultivated, philanthropic, and in
addition an anti-Semite. He may like fishing and the pleasures
of love, may be tolerant in matters of religion, full of generous
notions on the condition of the natives in Central Africa, and in
addition detest the Jews. If he does not like them, we do not
accept that a gentleman such as he, can possibly be a racist or
an anti-Semite. We call him a wise anti-Semite. We think that
he is not really anti-Semite, but rather a man who is careful,
prudent and cautious. We hasten to justify him in our mind. We
say that if he does not like them it is because his experience has
shown him that they are bad, because statistics have taught him
that they are dangerous, because certain historical factors have
influenced his judgment. Thus this opinion seems to be the
result of external causes, and those who wish to study it are
prone to neglect the personality of the anti-Semite.
But anti-Semitism is not created by the external causes, by the
negative characteristics of the Jews. Rather anti-Semitism is
something that enters the body from the mind. An anti-Semite
person has a “predisposition” to anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism
is an involvement of the mind, one so deep-seated and complete
that it extends to the physiological realm, as happens in cases of
hysteria. This involvement is not caused by experience. Far
from experience producing his idea of the Jew, it was the latter
which explained his experience. If the Jew did not exist, the
anti-Semite would invent him.
That may be so, you will say, but leaving the question of
experience to one side, must we not admit that anti-Semitism is
explained by certain historical data? For after all it does not
come out of the air. It would be easy for me to reply that the
history of France tells us nothing about the Jews: they were
oppressed right up to 1789…I have questioned a hundred people
on the reasons for their anti-Semitism. Most of them have
confined themselves to enumerating the defects with which
tradition has endowed the Jews. “I detest them because they are
selfish, intriguing, persistent, oily, tactless, etc.”
.” A painter said to me: “I am hostile to the Jews because, with
their critical habits, they encourage our servants to
insubordination.” A young actor without talent insisted that the
Jews had kept him from a successful career in the theater by
confining him to subordinate roles. A young woman said to me:
I have had the most horrible experiences with furriers; they
robbed me, they burned the fur I entrusted to them. Well they
were all Jews.” But why did she choose to hate Jews rather than
furriers? Why Jews or furriers rather than such and such a Jew
or such and such a furrier? Because she had in her a
predisposition toward anti-Semitism.
A classmate of mine at the lycee told me that Jews “annoy” him
because of the thousands of injustices that “Jew-ridden” social
organizations commit in their favor. “A Jew passed his
aggregation the year I was failed, and you can’t make me
believe that that fellow, whose father came from Cracow or
Lemberg, understood a poem by Ronsard or an eclogue by
Virgil better than I.” But he admitted that he disdained the
aggregation as a mere academic exercise, and that he didn’t
study for it. Thus, to explain his failure, he made use of two
systems of interpretation, like those madmen who, when they
are far gone in their madness, pretend to be the King of
Hungary but, if questioned sharply, admit to being shoemakers.
His thought moved on two planes without his being in the least
embarrassed by it. As a matter of fact, he will in time manage to
justify his past laziness on the grounds that it really would be
too stupid to prepare for an examination in which Jews are
passed in preference to good Frenchmen. Actually he ranked
twenty-seventh on the official list. There were twenty-six ahead
of him, twelve who passed and fourteen who failed. Suppose
Jews had been excluded from the competition; would that have
done him any good? And even if he had been at the top of the
list of unsuccessful candidates, even if by eliminating one of
the successful candidates he would have had a chance to pass,
why should the Jew Weil have been eliminated rather than the
Norman Matthieu or the Breton Arzell? To understand my
classmate’s indignation we must recognize that he had adopted
in advance a certain idea of the Jew, of his nature and of his
role in society. And to be able to decide that among twenty-six
competitors who were more successful than himself, it was the
Jew who robbed him of his place, he must a priori have given
preference in the conduct of his life to reasoning based on
passion… Others base their anti-Semitism not on their personal
experience, but on history.
Leaving the question of experience to one side, must we not
admit, they say, that anti-Semitism is explained by certain
historical data? For after all it does not come out of the air. It
would be easy for me to reply that the history of France tells us
nothing about the Jews: they were oppressed right up to 1789;
since then they have participated as best they could in the life
of the nation, taking advantage, naturally, of freedom of
competition to displace the weak, but no more and no less than
other Frenchmen. They have committed no crimes against
France, have engaged in no treason, even if people believe there
is proof that the number of Jewish soldiers in 1914 was lower
than it should have been… People quite easily talk about
“Jewish treason” as the cause of contemporary anti-Semitism…
Let us take the case of Poland and Russia. In the course of the
bloody Polish revolts of the nineteenth century, the Warsaw
Jews, whom the czars handled gently for reasons of policy, were
very lukewarm toward the rebels. By not taking part in the
insurrection they were able to maintain and improve their
position in a country ruined by repression. I don’t know whether
this is true or not. What is certain is that many Poles believe it,
and this “historical fact” contributes not a little to their
bitterness against the Jews. But if I examine the matter more
closely, I discover a vicious circle: the czars, we are told,
treated the Polish Jews well whereas they willingly ordered
pogroms against those in Russia. These sharply different
courses of action had the same cause. The Russian government
considered the Jews in both Russia and Poland to be
unassimilable; according to the needs of their policy, they had
them massacred at Moscow and Kiev because they were a
danger to the Russian empire, but favored them at Warsaw as a
means of stirring up discord among the Poles. The latter showed
nothing but hate and scorn for the Jews of Poland, but the
reason was the same: For them Israel could never become an
integral part of the national collectivity. Treated as Jews by the
czar and as Jews by the Poles, provided, quite in spite of
themselves, with Jewish interests in the midst of a foreign
community, is it any wonder that these members of a minority
behaved in accordance with the representation made of them?
In short, the essential thing here is not an “historical fact” but
the idea that the agents of history formed for themselves of the
Jew. When the Poles of today harbor resentment against the
Jews for their past conduct, they are incited to it by that same
idea. If one is going to reproach little children for the sins of
their grandfathers, one must first of all have a very primitive
conception of what constitutes responsibility. Furthermore one
must form his conception of the children on the basis of what
the grandparents have been. One must believe that what the
elders did the young are capable of doing. One must convince
himself that Jewish character is inherited. Thus the Poles of
1940 treated the Israelites in the community as Jews because
their ancestors in 1848 had done the same with their
contemporaries… It is therefore the idea of the Jew that one
forms for himself which would seem to determine history, not
the “historical fact” that produces the idea.
People speak to us also of “social facts.” But if we look at this
more closely we shall find the same vicious circle. There are
too many Jewish lawyers, someone says. But is there any
complaint that there are too many Norman lawyers? Even if all
the Bretons were doctors would we say anything more than that
“Britanny provides doctors for the whole of France”? Oh,
someone will answer, it is not at all the same thing. No doubt,
but that is precisely because we consider Normans as Normans
and Jews as Jews. Wherever we turn it is the ideas of the Jew
which seems to be the essential thing. Anti-Semitism precedes
the facts that are supposed to call it forth; it seeks them out to
nourish itself upon them; it must even interpret them in a
special way so that they may become truly offensive.
Finally there is the religious history. The facts of the problem
appear as follows: a concrete historical community is basically
national and religious; but the Jewish community, which once
was both, has been deprived bit by bit of both these concrete
characteristics. Its dispersion implies the breaking up of
common traditions. Its twenty centuries of dispersion and
political impotence forbid its having a historic past. If it is true,
as Hegel says, that a community is historical to the degree that
it remembers its history, then the Jewish community is the least
historical of all, for it keeps a memory of nothing but a long
martyrdom. It is neither their past, their religion, nor their soil
that unites the sons of Israel. If they have a common bond, if all
of them deserve the name of Jew, it is because they have in
common the situation of a Jew, that is they live in a community
which takes them for Jews. In a word, the Jew is perfectly
assimilable by modern nations, but he is to be defined as one
whom these nations do not wish to assimilate. What weighed
upon him originally was that he was the assassin of Christ.
Have we ever stopped to consider the intolerable situation of
men condemned to live in a society that adores the God they
have killed? Originally, the Jew was therefore a murderer or the
son of a murderer – which in the eyes of a community with a
pre-logical concept of responsibility amounts inevitably to the
same thing – it was as such that he was taboo. It is evident that
we cannot find the explanation for modern anti-Semitism here;
but if the anti-Semite has chosen the Jew as the object of his
hate, it is because of the religious horror that the latter has
always inspired. This horror has had a curious economic effect.
If the medieval church tolerated the Jews when she could have
assimilated them by force or massacred them, it was because
they filled a vital economic function. Accursed, they followed a
cursed but indispensable vocation; being unable to own land or
serve in the army, they trafficked in money, which a Christian
could not undertake without defiling himself. Thus the original
curse was soon reinforced by an economic curse, and it is above
all the latter that has persisted. Today we reproach the Jews for
following unproductive activities, without taking into account
the fact that their apparent autonomy within the nation comes
from the fact that they were originally forced into these trades
by being forbidden all others. Thus it is no exaggeration to say
that it is the Christians who have created the Jew in putting an
abrupt stop to his assimilation and in providing him, in spite of
himself, with a function in which he has since prospered.
But modern society has seized on this memory and has made it
the pretext and the base for its anti-Semitism. Thus, to know
what the contemporary Jew is, we must ask the Christian
conscience. And we must ask, not “What is a Jew?” but “What
have you made of the Jews?”
The Jew is one whom other men consider a Jew: that is the
simple truth from which we must start. In this sense the
democrat is right as against the anti-Semite, for it is the anti-
Semite who makes the Jew. But it would be wrong to say that
the distrust, the curiosity, the disguised hostility the Israelites
find around them are no more than the intermittent
demonstrations of a few hotheads. Primarily, anti-Semitism is
the expression of a primitive society that, though secret and
diffused, remains latent in the legal collectivity. We must not
suppose, therefore, that a generous outburst of emotion, a few
pretty words, a stroke of the pen will suffice to suppress it. That
would be like imagining you could abolish war by denouncing
its effects in a book. The Jew no doubt sets a proper value on
the sympathy shown him, but it cannot prevent his seeing anti-
Semitism as a permanent structure of the community in which
he lives.
For a Jew, conscious and proud of being Jewish, asserting his
claim to be a member of the Jewish community without ignoring
on that account the bonds which unite him to the national
community, there may not be so much difference between the
anti-Semite and the democrat. The former wishes to destroy him
as a man and leave nothing in him but the Jew, the pariah, the
untouchable; the latter wishes to destroy him as a Jew and
leaving nothing in him but the man, the abstract and universal
subject of the rights of man and the rights of the citizen. Thus
there may be detected in the most liberal democrat a tinge of
anti-Semitism; he is hostile to the Jew to the extent that the
latter thinks of himself as a Jew…The anti-Semite reproaches
the Jew with being Jewish; the democrat reproaches him with
willfully considering himself a Jew. Between his enemy and his
defender, the Jew is in a difficult situation: apparently he can
do no more than choose the sauce with which he will be
devoured. We must now ask ourselves the question: does the
Jew exist? And if he exists, what is he? Is he first a Jew or first
a man? Is the solution of the problem to be found in the
extermination of all the Israelites or in their total assimilation?
But what kind of assimilation? Isn’t assimilation itself another
way of killing the Jewishness of the Jew, and therefore another
way of exterminating the Jews? Some people think that anti-
Semitism will disappear when Jews become fully Frenchmen.
Thus they ask Jews to hasten this integration. And some propose
drastic means to speed the process of assimilation. Thus some
advocate the policy of mixed marriages and a rigorous
interdiction against Jewish religious practices – in particular,
circumcision. There are even some Jews who suggest that all
Jews be forced to change their names. I say quite simply: these
measures would be inhumane. No democracy can seek
integration of the Jews at such a cost. Such a policy of
integration aims at nothing less than the liquidation of the
Jewish race. It represents an extreme form of the tendency we
have noticed in the democrat, a tendency purely and simply to
suppress the Jew for the sake of the man. But the man does not
exist; there are Jews, Protestants, Catholics; there are
Frenchmen, Englishmen, Germans; there are whites, blacks,
yellows. Certainly Jews would wish to integrate themselves in
the nation, but as Jews, not as abstract men. All persons who
through their work collaborate toward the greatness of a country
have the full rights of citizens of that country. What gives them
this right is not the possession of a problematic and abstract
“human nature,” but their active participation in the life of the
society. This means, then, that the Jews – and likewise the
Arabs and the Negroes – from the moment that they are
participants in the national enterprise, have a right in that
enterprise; they are citizens. But they have these rights as Jews,
Negroes, or Arabs – that is, as concrete persons. In societies
where women vote, they are not asked to change their sex when
they enter the voting booth; the vote of a woman is worth just as
much as that of a man, but it is as a woman that she votes, with
her womanly intuitions and concerns, in her full character of a
woman. When it is a question of the legal rights of the Jew, and
of the more obscure but equally indispensable rights that are not
inscribed in any code, he must enjoy those rights not as a
potential Christian but precisely as a French Jew. It is with his
character, his customs, his tastes, his religion if he has one, his
name, and his physical traits that we must accept him.
What is needed to overcome anti-Semitism is not to appeal to
the generosity of the Aryans – with even the best of them, that
virtue is in eclipse. What must be done is to point out to each
one that the fate of the Jews is his fate. Not one Frenchman will
be free so long as the Jews do not enjoy the fullness of their
rights. Not one Frenchman will be secure so long as a single
Jew – in France or in the world at large – can fear for his life.
(Jean-Paul Sartre, Anti-Semite and Jew. New York: Schocken
Books, 1976).
Christian Theology and Anti-Semitism
(A case of epistemic violence and theological terrorism).
No one would disagree with the assessment that Christians, over
the centuries, have been guilty of anti-Semitism, sometimes
with barbarous results. The real question is not whether
individual Christians have been antisemites, but whether anti-
Semitism is somehow ingrained in the very roots of
Christianity, in its very essence. Rosemary Ruether has declared
that anti-Semitism is the “other side of Christology,” the
inevitable fallout of placing Jesus at the right hand of the
Father.
Here is the way Rosemary Ruether articulated the problem of
anti-Semitism in Christian theology:
The examination of the two thousand year old Christian
tradition of anti-Judaism; the suggestion that this tradition
brought forth the evil fruits of many centuries of victimization
and pogroms, and contributed in basic ways to the Nazi “final
solution,” raises tremendous anxiety for Christians. It is the
subject that remains shrouded in a conspiracy of silence.
Christian catechetics from the grade school to the seminary
level dutifully repeats its traditions about the Jewish origins of
Christian faith, and the supercession of Judaism by Christianity.
Christians learn early to love the “good” Old Testament Jews
and hate the “bad” New Testament Jews; i.e., scribes, Pharisees,
High Priests and simply “the Jews.” But what happened to
Jewish Christian relations after that is a blank in Christian
education. Facts about the long history of Christian persecution
of the Jews, well known to their Jewish neighbors, are unknown
to Christians.
As always, the victims remember; the victors forget.
Consequently when Christians first begin to absorb some of this
hidden history, there is at first a great incredulity. It seems
impossible that all this could have happened for so long, and we
have never heard of it!
FRIDAY PRAYER FOR THE CONVERSION OF JEWS,
PROTESTANTS,
ORTHODOX, PAGANS, ETC.
It is worth noting that the full prayer also calls for the
conversion of other groups
- not just Jews - including Protestants, Orthodox, and pagans.
On Monday, February 4, 2008, Pope Benedict XVI made public
a revised prayer for the Jews to be used in the "Solemn Prayers"
of the traditional Good Friday service. Starting with Good
Friday 2008, the prayer will become a permanent part of the
Roman Missal of 1962, used for the celebration of the
Traditional Latin Mass.
The pope used Romans 11:24-26 as the basis for the revised
prayer.
In July 2007, Pope Benedict XVI, in his motu
proprioSummorum Pontificum, restored the Traditional Latin
Mass as one of the two approved forms of the Mass. To that
mass he now added the revision of "Solemn Prayers" that are
prayed on Good Friday. These prayers are offered for the
Church and all Catholics, then for non-Catholic Christians, then
for the Jews, and finally for pagans. While each prayer is
different, the point is the same: to acknowledge that Jesus
Christ, by His Death and Resurrection, is the salvation of all
mankind. Therefore, the prayers ask that Catholics may be
strengthened in their faith; that non-Catholic Christians may
come to the fullness of the Catholic Faith; and that Jews and
pagans may come to recognize Christ as their savior. In other
words, the hope is that all will be saved through faith in Christ.
Most of those who desired the prayers to be changed wanted the
prayer for the conversion of the Jews either dropped or changed
in such a way that it no longer was a prayer for conversion.
The new text reads, in Latin (the language in which it will be
prayed):
Oremus et pro Iudaeis.
Ut Deus et Dominus noster illuminet corda eorum,
ut agnoscant Iesum Christum salvatorem omnium hominum.
Oremus. Flectamus genua. Levate.
Omnipotens sempiterne Deus,
qui vis ut omnes homines salvi fiant
et ad agnitionem veritatis veniant, concede propitius,
ut plenitudine gentium in Ecclesiam Tuam intrante omnis Israel
salvus fiat.
Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen.
ENGLISH TRANSLATION:
"Let us pray also for the Jews that the Lord our God may
illuminate their hearts and that they also may acknowledge Our
Lord Jesus Christ."
The old Latin text prayed for the conversion of the Jews, calling
on God to deliver "that people...from its darkness" and to
remove the "blindness" (a term which was adapted from an
Epistle of St. Paul).
After the publication of the Motu, which re-introduced the pre-
Conciliation Mass, many in the Hebrew world were concerned.
The Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem, and spiritual guides of the
Sephardic and Aschenazi communities wrote to Pope Benedict
XVI to ask that the Good Friday prayer be altered.
Under Pope Pius XII, it was instructed that "pro perfidis
judaeis" was meant to refer to "Jews who have no faith." Pius
XII also reintroduced the genuflection for that prayer. Under
Pope John XXIII, the term "perfidis" was eliminated, along with
the succeeding reference to "perfidious Jewery." Kenneth J.
Wolfe, a columnist for the traditionalist Catholic newspaper The
Remnant, said that traditionalists would have preferred no
change at all. Wolfe said that the change "rattles the cage of
traditionalists", and would likely make more difficult any
rapprochement with traditionalists groups like the Society of St.
Pius X, who reject the Second Vatican Council and have
appointed their own bishops.
Rabbi David Rosen, director of inter-religious affairs for the
American Jewish Committee said that although he was pleased
that the offensive terms were removed from the prayer, he still
objected to the new prayer because it specified that Jews should
find redemption specifically in Christ.
Reaction of Rabbi Walter Homolka (Prominent German Rabbi,
executive director of the Abraham Geiger College at the
University of Potsdam, Germany):
By promoting this prayer for the conversion of Jews, Pope
Benedict XVI indicates that he believes that the path to
salvation, even for Jews, can only go through Jesus, the savior.
This opens the floodgates for the conversion of Jews. The
Internet is already full of comments by conservative, right-wing
Catholics who say: "Wonderful, now we finally have the signal
to convert the Jews." This kind of signal has an extremely
provocative effect on anti-Semitic groups. The Catholic Church
does not have its anti-Semitic tendencies under control. The
Pope is making, on a central liturgical occasion, namely the
Good Friday liturgy, a theological statement that Jews cannot
help but perceive as aggressive and crass. Throughout history,
Jews have repeatedly been subjected to persecution and death
on Good Friday. Christians have often translated the message of
Good Friday into the question: "Where are the murderers of
Christ?" In 2006, the chairman of the General Rabbinical
Council of Germany, Rabbi Henry Brandt, expressed himself in
very clear words to (leading German theologian) Cardinal
Walter Kasper. He said that any approach to the possibility of a
mission by the Church to convert Jews is essentially a hostile
act -- a continuation, on a different level, of Hitler's crimes
against the Jews. These are strong but honest words. The
Catholic Church should acknowledge the fidelity of God, who
abides by his choice of the nation of Israel as his chosen people.
HISTORY OF ANTI-SEMITISM IN CHRISTIANITY
From Leonard Swidler, After the Absolute The Dialogical
Future of
Religious Pluralism. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1990);
pp.114-117
Chapter 7. JEWISH-CHRISTIAN DIALOGUE
All of the reasons given up until now for Christians entering
into dialogue with Jews and Judaism have been fundamentally
for the Christian’s sake. There is another reason why Christians
must turn toward Jews in dialogue that is only partly for their
own sakes, and partly other-directed.
a. Antisemitism and Jewish-Christian Dialogue
I am speaking of our heinous history of hostility and hatred
toward Jews and Judaism for two thousand years. Thank God
there are a few spaces of light; Jewish culture, learning and life
did in fact flourish in Christendom in certain places and at
certain times. Particularly some Christian princes and bishops-
and often the papacy-supported and defended the Jews. But as
can be seen from careful histories of the Jews, as that of the
Catholic historian Frederick M. Schweitzer,1 this was a minor
theme in a symphony of destruction. There are whole libraries
detailing the ignominy to which Christians have subjected Jews,
and consequently with which they have besmirched their own
souls.
Let us recall only a tiny number of our most saintly antisemites
(I would have thought that such reminders were completely
superfluous today with the recent calling to consciousness of
the horrors of the Holocaust, but just a short time ago at a
Protestant-Catholic clergy retreat I found priests and ministers
proclaiming the righteousness of the Church in the history of its
relations with the Jews. Is such ignorance, or perversity,
possible in present-day Christian clergy? Sadly, it is.)
Recall the words of the “golden-tongued” St. John Chrysostom
(344-407 A.D.), which were uttered not among a small
gathering of learned clerics, but were flung from the pulpit in
Antioch for all Christians to hear, both there in that heavily
Jewish city, and also reverberating through all the subsequent
centuries of Christian antisemitic preaching. He thundered that
“Jews are the most miserable of all men.... lustful, rapacious,
greedy, perfidious bandits.... inveterate murderers, destroyers,
men possessed by the devil.... whose debauchery and
drunkenness have given them the manners of the pig and the
lusty goat. They know only one thing, to satisfy their gullets,
get drunk, to kill and maim one another.... They have surpassed
the ferocity of wild beasts, for they murder their offspring and
immolate them to the devil.”
As to Judaism, symbolized by the synagogue, it is:
an assembly of criminals... a den of thieves...a cavern of devils,
an abyss of perdition.... far from venerating the synagogue
because of the books it contains, hold it in hatred and aversion
for the same reason.... I hate the synagogue precisely because it
has the law and prophets.... I hate the Jews also because they
outrage the law.
The early ninth century was the time of the Carolingian
Renaissance in Western Christendom, and at the height of it we
find St. Agobard (779-840 A.D.), powerful Archbishop of
Lyons, and known as “probably the most cultured man of his
time.” St. Agobard’s words about the Jews sound as if he was
standing in a St. John Chrysostom echo-chamber:
“Jews are cursed and covered with malediction, as by a cloak.
The malediction has penetrated them as water in their entrails
and oil in their bones. They are cursed in the city and cursed in
the country, cursed is their coming in and their going out.
Cursed are the fruits of their loins, of their lands, of their
flocks; cursed their cellars, their granaries, their shops, their
food, and the crumbs of their tables.
The official Church at the highest level also played out the same
role of the antisemite. There was the twelfth Ecumenical
Council, Lateran IV (1215 A.D.), which visited a number of
disabilities on all Jews, including enjoining them from
appearing in public during Eastertime, barring them from
holding public office, and declaring a moratorium on crusaders’
debts to Jews. Father Edward Flannery, in his pioneer history of
Christian antisemitism, remarks:
Thus far, there was nothing new in these enactments, which
merely extended to the universal Church what earlier centuries
had applied more locally. The unique and most extraordinary
measure taken by the Council was the prescription of a distinc
tive dress for Jews and Saracens. (At a later date, heretics,
prostitutes, and lepers were included.)
Raul Hilberg in his The Destruction of the European Jews (New
York, 1961), pp. 5f., lists twenty-two conciliar or synodal
decrees which were severely restrictive of Jews (from the fourth
to the fifteenth centuries) and were paralleled by specific Nazi
decrees. He states that the list of Church measures was taken in
its entirety from J.E. Scherer, Die Rechtsverhältnisse der Juden
in den deutsch-österreichischen Länder (Leipzig, 1901), pp. 39-
49. The list is as follows (only the first date of each measure is
listed):
1) Prohibition of intermarriage and of sexual intercourse
between Christians and Jews, Synod of Elvira, 306, C.E.
2) Jews and Christians not permitted to eat together, Synod of
Elvira.
3) Jews not allowed to hold public office, Synod of Clermont,
535 C.E.
4) Jews not allowed to employ Christian servants or possess
Christian slaves, 3rd Synod of Orleans.
5) Jews not permitted to show themselves in the streets during
Passion Week, 3rd Synod of Orleans.
6) Burning of the Talmud and other books, 12th Synod of
Toledo, 681 C.E.
7) Christians not permitted to patronize Jewish doctors,
Trulanic Synod, 692 C.E.
8) Christians not permitted to live in Jewish homes, Synod of
Narbonne, 1050 C.E.
9) Jews obliged to pay taxes for support of the Chruch to the
same extent as Christians, Synod of Gerona, 1078 C.E.
10) Prohibition of Sunday work, Synod of Szabolcs, 1092 C.E.
11) Jews not permitted to be plaintiffs or witnesses against
Christians in the courts, 3rd Lateran Council, 1179 C/E., Canon
26.
12) Jews not permitted to withhold inheritance from
descendants who had accepted Christianity, 3rd Lateran
Council, Canon 26.
13) The marking of Jewish clothes with a badge, 4th Lateran
Council, 1215 C.E., Canon 68 (copied from the legislation by
Caliph Omar II, 643-44 C.E., who had decreed that Christians
wear blue belts and Jews yellow belts).
14) Construction of new synagogues prohibited, Council of
Oxford, 1222 C.E.
15) Christians not permitted to attend Jewish ceremonies, Synod
of Vienna, 1267 C.E.
16) Jews not permitted to dispute with simple Christian people
about the tenets of the Catholic religion, Synod of Vienna.
17) Compulsory ghettos, Synod of Breslau, 1227 C.E.
18) Christians not permitted to sell or rent real estate to Jews,
Synod of Ofen, 1279 C.E.
19) Adoption by a Christian of the Jewish religion or return by
a baptized Jew to the Jewish religion defined as heresy, Synod
of Mainz, 1310 C.E.
20) Sale or transfer of Church articles to Jews prohibited, Synod
of Lavour, 1368 C.E.
21) Jews not permitted to act as agents in the conclusion of
contracts between Christians, especially marriage contracts,
Council of Basel, 1432, Sessio XIX.
22) Jews not permitted to obtain academic degrees, Council of
Basel, Sessio XIX.
Then there are the scourging words of the father of the
Protestant Reformation, Martin Luther, who shortly before his
death wrote a violent diatribe entitled
AbouttheJewsandTheirLies, in which among other things he
wrote that
Jews “are thirsty bloodhounds and murderers of all
Christendom, with full intent ...they had poisoned water and
wells, stolen children and hacked them apart, in order to cool
their temper secretly with Christian blood.
His conclusion was that their synagogues should be burned and
their books seized, that they should be forced to work with their
hands, or better still, be expelled by the princes.7
They should be forced to hardest labor as handymen of serfs
only; they should not be permitted to hold services; every
Christian should be admonished to deal with them in a merciless
manner; if you suffer, strike them on the jaw; if I had the
power, I would assemble them to prove to us that we Christians
do not worship God, under penalty of having their tongues cut
out through the backs of their necks.
Is it any wonder that Christians with this long heritage of hatred
allowed and even abetted the cataclysmic horrors of the
Holocaust, with its choking of the air with the smoke and ash of
incinerated living Jewish children? Presumably no readers of
this book share a direct responsibility for that Teutonic terror,
but-and here let me shift to the first person-all of us Christians
share gladly in the Christian heritage that made it possible. We
cannot claim only the good of that heritage and make believe
that the evil is not also there. That Christian heritage is now our
heritage, and therefore our responsibility. There is no way that
we can exorcize the demon of anti-Semitism from its past,
present and future unless we first become aware of it. We must
study it and face it honestly, and then our first response must be
repentance. We cannot undo the overwhelming injustices of the
past, but we can and we must acknowledge and repudiate them.
Then we must go on to make whatever recompense we can in an
attempt to redress the imbalance of justice between Christian
and Jew-inadequate though this attempt must of necessity be.
Moreover, we must not expect the Jews immediately to embrace
us, forgiving and forgetting. We Christians have had a two-
millennia-long history of tricking and betraying Jews. They are
understandably suspicious about our motives and sincerity. We
must be patient and prove ourselves not only with words but
also with many deeds. Then perhaps they will turn to us in a
dialogue in which there is no hidden Christian agenda of
conversion. We will then meet as equal partners, parcumpari,
each coming to learn from the other.
Book available online: http://global-dialogue.com/swidlerbooks.
ANTI-SEMITISM IN CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY
(Hegel’s Philosophy of World Religions)
Mainstream Christianity has often built a binary opposition
between Christian values and the values of other religions. In so
doing it follows a worldview largely prevalent in European
intellectual heritage. Hegel captured well this “invention of
otherness” in his philosophy of world history and in his
demonstration of the superiority of Christianity over Judaism.
Hegel’s philosophy of world history and his reflection on the
rationality of Christianity have had a tremendous impact in
Christian theology, and especially on missionary theology
which shaped the perception of non-Europeans in the world in a
decisive way up to this day. Hegel’s exclusion of Africa from
history and humanity itself was not only a simple matter of
bigotry, but rather an outcome of his rigorous philosophical
thinking and his theological conception of Christianity. Well
before his statements on Africa, Hegel had applied his
philosophy to Judaism.
While the anti-semitism of Martin Heidegger is now a matter of
common knowledge and gave way to various publications,
Hegel’s anti-semitism has been investigated rather modestly. I
will limit myself here to a recent publication by John D. Caputo
who made an enlightening comment on the “fears and tears” of
Jacques Derrida with regard to what he terms “the terrorism of
Hegelianism.”
Meditating on Hegel’s philosophy of religion, Jacques Derrida
worried over what becomes of the Jew once Christianity is said
to be a representation of the absolute truth. Similarly the main
question is “what becomes of the African” once Christianity is
said to be the embodiment not only of the absolute truth and
revelation but also of goodness and reason. It will become clear
that Hegel’s logic which excluded the Jew from the world of
true religion, beauty, freedom and goodness was applied to
Africa with the same tragic conclusions.
It is worth noting that Hegel supplied a veritable encyclopedia
of Christian Europe and a logic of European Christianity, and
taking inspiration from Christian theology, he organized his
theory around the notion of LOVE. He identified Christianity
and love first with the European spirit and secondly with
philosophy, itself seen as a proprium of the European mind. For
him the truth of Christianity is philosophy and no ontology is
possible before the Gospel or outside it. Hegel articulated the
most ambitious philosophy of the superiority of Christianity
over all other religions and represents the culmination of
Western Christianity to put as much metaphysical and
theological distance as possible between Christianity and the
Jews by attaching attach Christianity as closely as possible to a
Greco-European spirit and by detaching it from the Jew, the
tendency to view Christianity as spiritually Greek, not Jewish.
In Hegel, the history of Christian Europe and the figure of the
European Christianity take the form of a philosophy of history
and of the Spirit, that is of philosophy itself, an onto-
theologization of the Christian spirit of which the Jew is a
negative moment. In the history of Christian philosophy,
Hegel represents the final triumph of Christian querelle with
world religions, initiated by that old dispute between Paul and
Peter. Hegel embraced the winner Paul, the Jewish roman
citizen, against Peter, the symbol of the legalism of Jerusalem,
and articulated his philosophy of religion on Paul’s notion of
Pleroma oun nomon he agape (the love which outdoes and
perfects the law). Paul’s opposition between Jewish law and
Christian Love offers Hegel a ground for the articulation of a
philosophy of history which disqualifies not only Jewish
religion but also Jewish history and Jewish people.
When it comes to Jews, Hegel does not take any prisoners. As
Jacques Derrida pointed out in a careful analysis of Hegel’s
philosophy, Hegel painted a very hateful portrait of the Jew as a
result of his own understanding of the nature and logic of
Christianity as a representation of the absolute truth. Hegel
accomplished this on both grounds of theological and
philosophical arguments. Following Paul’s notion of Christian
love, Hegel undertook a powerful attack upon the Jews, and
this, in the very name of love, a hateful defense of the religion
of love over and against the hatefulness of the Jews. Hegel used
very skillfully that old strategy of Christian polemics: love as
weapon against Jewish religion. As Caputo pointed out Love has
been Christian’s most cunning and most effective weapon
against non-Christian religions. Hegel used it ruthlessly and
even brilliantly as the point of departure of his thought and as
his first model of the Aufhebung. Using Paul’s notion of the
pleroma of love, Hegel like Paul put Jewish law in its place and
in so doing he also put the Jewish people in their place, that is
in no place, for by making Christian love and Christianity itself
the logic of history, of freedom, of the Spirit, Hegel made the
Jew historically, philosophically, and theologically a figure of
unfreedom and alienation. Stuck in the mud of ritual and
literalism, and in the blood of the mohel, the Jew, according to
Hegel, understands only the language of force and violence, not
the language of love, and politically he becomes a figure of
perdition, guilty of the perfidious execution of the Man of Love
who came to liberate humankind from alienation. For Hegel, the
Jew not only clings to a religion historically dead, replaced by
Christianity, and to an old Mosaic law replaced by love but
constitutes a philosophical type, the very figure of alienation
from love. The Jew is stone cold and heartless, an Abrahamic
figure capable of killing whatever he loves, and a legalist and
Pharisee, possessing only the outer shell of ethical life. Hegel
skillfully turns Jewish monotheism into a caricature. According
to him, the Jew despises idols because he is incapable of
appreciating the sensuous embodiment of the infinite. And
because he is incapable of giving sensible form to the
supersensible, of letting the infinite shine with beauty in finite
figures, the Jew is incapable of appreciating beauty, for beauty
is the way the invisible makes itself visible, palpable, felt.
Being incapable to see the infinite in the finite world, the Jew is
incapable of meditation for he is ignorant of incarnation. For
Hegel, Jesus, the man of freedom as opposed to the spirit of the
law, was the becoming un-Jewish of the Spirit, for law is for
children not for the grown up. Such is the prototype, the type
and the stereotype of Hegel’s metaphysics. The most interesting
thing is that Hegel’s anti-Semitism is expressed in a
sophisticated philosophical and theological reasoning. The
Hegelian metaphysics and rhetoric deconstructs the Jew as the
anti-phenomenological thing that the Spirit expels and vomits in
its triumphant march toward fulfillment. In Hegel’s system, the
Jew stands as everything that the Spirit casts out as un-
beautiful, un-reconciled, un-historical, un-harmonized, un-true,
or un-phenomenalizable, that is the phenomenological figure,
the Gestaltung of a divided, ugly spirit. For Hegel, the
Jewishness of Jesus is something for the Spirit to surpass. The
empirical actuality of Jesus had to break up, in order to allow
the Spirit to flow and leave Jesus behind, letting Christianity
become itself, become Greek, beyond Jesus while letting the
circumcised bury the circumcised..
Finally Hegel turns the Torah against the Jew and uses it as
evidence that the Jew is ignorant of the concept of Human
rights. He starts with a definition of law. Law, he says, is not
truth, but a command, not the manifestation of the infinite in
the finite, but a distant, empty and contentless imperative. Since
Jewish society is governed by the Torah, there is no freedom in
this world, no spirit, no true polis that embodies political
reason, no political subjects with rights who recognize
themselves in the whole, but only violence, imperative, the rule
of the master over the slave. This, in Hegel’s view, is the
difference between Moses and Solon, between the Mosaic law
and the democratic laws of Athens. Jewish life is an economy of
expropriation, where ownership is cut off and everything is on
loan, a system devoid of civil rights and family property and
laws of inheritance, which are canceled in the year of the
jubilee. One may argue that once Hegel has presented the Jew as
the enemy of Human rights, the elimination of the Jew comes as
a necessary step for the protection of Human rights in the
world. As this analyzis shows, Hegel used a fourfold approach:
- a) absolutization of Christianity as the only religion of truth,
love and reason;
- b) the identification of the Christian spirit with European
civilization;
- c) the exclusion of non-European cultures from the realm of
philosophy, true religion and civilization;
- d) the “elimination of the brute” as a way of saving
civilization.
It is exactly this same reasoning that has often been applied to
non-Christian people. These people have been defined in
mainstream scholarship as the exact opposite of reason, law,
morality, and indeed the very antithesis of genuine humanity.
Moreover Hegel’s way of thinking about non European people
is consonant with the development of Christian theology in its
perception of the pagans and savages. Christian theology
understands God as a God of history, a God who intervenes in
human history, a God who guides the events of world history.
This notion is critical to the understanding of Hegel’s vision of
world history and the role he assigns to Africa in that history, a
role which seems to be the will of God according to the inner
logic of Hegel’s thinking.
Major reference: Caputo, John D., The Prayers and Tears of
Jacques Derrida: Religion without Religion. (Bloomington:
Indiana, University Press, 1997); p.246
Anti-Semitism in Biblical Studies:
the “Kittel scandal” and the Hegelian Paradigm
Once Hegel has presented the Jew as the enemy of the religion
of Love, the elimination of the Jew comes as a necessary step
for the promotion of love in the world. But to better grasp what
I mean here by Hegelian paradigm in Christian theology I shall
turn to the case of Gerhard Kittel, an eminent figure in biblical
studies.
The role played by Christian ways of theologizing in the rise of
anti-Semitism, from Church fathers to Martin Luther has been
object of extended studies. I shall limit myself here to a recent
prominent case which is enlightening because of the intellectual
qualities of the scholar and his work, and also because of his
connection with one of the most extreme ideologies of human
rights violation, i.e. Nazism. The case of Gerhard Kittel (1888-
1948) here is worth mentioning in order to grasp the impact of
some theological ways of thinking on anti-Semitism and,
subsequently, the role played by Christian theologies in the
promotion not only of colonialism, but also in the creation of
the idea of a primitive, cursed and evil Africa.The Kittel
scandal is particularly interesting because it concerns the sacred
texts which are the source of Christian theology.
Gerhard Kittel is an eminent German Evangelical New
Testament scholar who stands as a monument in contemporary
development of biblical studies. At the same time Kittel entered
into world history as a “leading theologian under Hitler.” This
expression coined by Robert Ericksen refers to the fact that
Kittel became the eminent symbol of the anti-Semitic dimension
of Christian theology. His anti-Semitism was so blatant that in
1945, at the close of the second world war, he was arrested at
his home in Tübingen by French police for his Nazi membership
and his active role in suspect organizations. He was then
relieved of his scholarly and academic responsibilities and
imprisoned. The eminent Christian biblical scholar William
Fox Albright declared that Kittel “became the mouthpiece of the
most vicious Nazi anti-Semitism, sharing with Emanuel Hirsch
of Göttingen the grim distinction of making extermination of
the Jews theologically respectable.” Although many Christian
theologians struggled ambiguously with the Jewish question,
Kittel, as Albright observed took the position to its extreme
conclusion:
In view of the terrible viciousness of his attacks on Judaism and
the Jews, which continued at least until 1943, Gerhard Kittel
must bear the guilt of having contributed more, perhaps, than
any other Christian theologian to the mass murder of Jews by
the Nazis.
Kittel did not limit himself to pure scholastic pursuit of
knowledge. He clearly considered three options for dealing with
German Jews: extermination, deportation to Palestine, and
assimilation, and analyzed which option was more efficient.
Examining the case of extermination, he argued that
Extirpation of Jewry by violence is not worthy of serious
discussion: if the systems of the Spanish Inquisition or the
Russian pogroms did not manage it, it will certainly be
impossible to achieve in the twentieth century. There is no inner
sense in this idea either. A historical state of affairs, as
exemplified by this people, can be resolved by the extirpation of
the people only in demagogical slogans but never in history
itself. The sense of a historical situation always consists in that
it sets us a task we have to master. To kill all Jews does not
mean, however, to master the situation.
Kittel, who as a good historian, understood the impossibility of
these three options rejected them on a pragmatic ground and
proposed a system of “apartheid.” He argued that Jews be
stripped of their German citizenship and be given the status of
guests, and that they live separately from Germany’s Christians.
In other words, he argued for the abolition of the emancipation
act which had led to the integration of Jews in the German
society and the return of Jews to the situation of pre-
Enlightenment ghettos. All that for the benefit of the German
nation.
The most important point here is not Kittel’s life and choices,
but the theological logic he brought to biblical studies. As Max
Weinreich pointed out in his book on Hitler’s professors (1946),
Kittel not only was a Nazi through and through but also he
played a crucial role in the rise of a Anti-Jewish science, thus
contributing to legitimizing Nazi anti-Semitism and making it
academically and religiously respectable. According to Alan
Rosen, Kittel was one of the leading scholars in a Nazi research
institute and gave lectures and published articles and books that
provided a Christian, religious basis for the policies decreed by
the Nazi government. Hence, the scholarship he pursued in
biblical studies not only refrained from challenging the status
quo but rather worked within and benefited from Nazi
institutions. He split his scholarly work during the second world
war between Tübingen and the University of Vienna, publishing
much of his wartime research under the auspices of the
Reichsinstitut für Geschichte des Neuen Deutschlands (Institute
for the History of the New Germany). This institute emphasized
a study of history based on the category of race, and enjoyed
close and amiable relations to the upper echelon of Nazi
officials. All this had to do with his understanding of world
history and the nature of Christianity, and understanding which
found its way in his famous work, the nine-volume Theological
Dictionary of the New Testament (Theologisches Wörterbuch
zum Neuen Testament). This dictionary enjoys in both
Protestant and Catholic Theology such a reputation that it
continues to be regarded as a foundational tool for students of
biblical texts the world over. And yet this highly scholarly work
grew out of a tainted theological atmosphere. It should be noted
that Kittel was a man deeply rooted in Christian tradition. His
own father Rudolf Kittel was an eminent specialist of the Old
Testament, and Gerhard Kittel began his research with an
amazing openness to Judaism. According to Alan Rosen, in the
1920s, his work was exceptionally generous to Judaism, in
contrast with other Christian scholars of his time. While under
the influence of Adolf von Harnack’s The Essence of
Christianity, many scholars favored the notion that Christianity
drew its inspiration and substance primarily from its Greco-
Roman milieu, Kittel, who had become expert in the
relationship between the New Testament and the rabbinic
literature operated a revolution by emphasizing the Jewish
roots of Christianity. Opting for a position which was not
popular during his era and bucking the then dominant trend, he
argued in his Jesus und die Rubbinen (1914) that most of Jesus’
teaching has its parallel in the Talmud thus challenging what
others saw as the distinctive character of Christianity. But
Kittel’s discovery was also the beginning of his trouble.
Confronted as a Christian with the question of the specificity
and uniqueness of Christianity, Kittel moved into a direction
which was to lead him to anti-Semitism. Starting with the
premise that the distinctive character of Christianity layed not
in its teachings, which it shared with Judaism, but rather with
the divinity of Jesus, which Judaism had rejected, Kittel turned
the notion of rejection into a dominant theological theme. The
rejection of Judaism became an indispensable way of affirming
the validity of Christianity. And finally the rejection of Judaism
as a religion lead to the rejection of the people who reject Jesus,
that is to the extermination of the Jews.
In 1933, allying the word and the world, Kittel who was the
professor of New Testament at the University of Tübingen,
joined the Nazi pary and welcomed National Socialism as “a
renewal movement based on a Christian moral foundation” and
regarded this Nazi Parti as an antidote to the decadence and
immorality of the Weimar republic. But the most important
point here is his use of biblical scholarship to justify the
persecution of Jews. In 1933, on the occasion of the fiftieth
anniversary of the German Student Union in Tübingen, he
delivered a public lecture on Die Judenfrage (“The Jewish
Question”), in which he defended Hitler’s anti-Semitic
legislation, on the ground, among other things, that the
Scripture themselves teach the rejection of the Jews because “by
rejecting Christ the Jews had themselves incurred rejection.”
Kittel who started his research with the appreciation of rabbinic
influences on Christianity moved progressively in the opposite
direction. The need to define the uniqueness of Christianity will
lead him and his team to the need for the “purification of
Christianity from Jewish influences” and more concretely to the
problematic movement of the “Dejudification” of the
Christianity and the German Church so well promoted by the
Institut zur Erforschung des jüdischen Einflusses auf das
deutsche kirchliche Leben (The Institute for Research on the
Jewish Influence on German Church Life). With regard to the
worldview of the Dictionary, Kittel who assumed its editorship
from 1929 to 1945 authorized the publication of articles which
were clearly anti-Semitic and gave voice to authors who were
even more anti-Semitic than himself. This is for instance the
case of Walter Grundmann and G. Bertram who contributed
thirty-nine articles to the first four volumes and who embodied
the problematic worldview of the Dictionary. Grundmann and
Bertram were both members of the Institute for Research on the
Jewish Influence on German Church Life whose goal was the
Dejudification of the Christian Church and theology.
Grundmann connected this “defense” of Christianity with the
patriotic struggle for the protection of the Christian German
nation. Such a protection required the conceptualization of the
Jew as the enemy of both Christ and the German people. He
made it clear that to achieve its goal of dejudification, the
institute intended to lead a war against Jews and Judaism. In
1943 he explicitly wrote that “In the fateful battle of the
Greater Germany which is a fateful battle against World Jewry
and against all destructive and nihilistic forces, the work of the
institute gives the tools for the overthrow of all religious
foreignness... and serves the belief of the Reich. clearly wrote
that the goal of the institute.” The scholarly task of
dejudification led by this institute comprised the radical
separation of the New Testament and the Old Testament and the
attempt to demonstrate that Jesus was not a Jew. In the article
“Megas” (Greatness) he published in the Dictionary,
Grundmann articulated a reflection reminiscent of Hegel. In his
need to explain the uniqueness of the Gospel’s message he built
a binary opposition by contrasting Jesus and the Scribes. After
noting that while the teaching of Jesus is the greatest
commandment of love, the scribes focus on the law, he
concludes that this difference carries with it “the radical
overthrow of Jewish nomism and in some sense of Judaism
itself as a religion.”
It would be simplistic to regard Kittel as a vulgar anti-Semite.
His understanding of the biblical view of the Jews was part of a
long tradition of Christian theology. As Kittel’s collusion with
Nazism shows, Christian theology of the “fulfillment of the
mosaic law by Jesus” leads to anti-Semitism. What happened
with regard to Jews, women, native Americans and many other
so-called “savage pagans” happened also to Africans. Although
Kittel and his colleagues had other reasons for their anti-
Semitism, what is interesting for African studies is the inner
logic of biblical studies, specifically the notion of the
fulfillment of the Mosaic law which stands at the core of New
Testament scholarship and its notion of the uniqueness of
Christianity. Kittel and his team sensed the need for the
“purification” of Christianity from Judaism. In Africa the battle
was waged against traditional religion and ways of worship. To
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SACRED TEXTS (THE WORD OF GOD)Table of ContentsSECTION 1.docx

  • 1. SACRED TEXTS (THE WORD OF GOD) Table of Contents: SECTION 1: THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK (FAITH AND REASON) AND THE CONSEQUENCES OF BIBLICAL FUNDAMENTALISM · FUNDAMENTALISM · ANTI-MODERNISM · ANTI-SEMITISM SECTION 2: SOME KEY BIBLICAL TEXTS I. On the Divinity of Jesus II. The Essence of Christianity III. Major Corpus of Biblical Laws IV. On Forbidden Food and Dietary Laws V. Sexual Ethic VI. Women VII. Slaves VIII. Political Theology (attitude toward governments and rulers)
  • 2. IX. On War and other forms of violence X. Religion and the Economy (Business Ethic and Social Justice) XI. Nationalism/Patriotism versus Universalism XII. Idolatry and Forbidden gods and religions SECTION 3: TEXTS FROM THE KORAN SECTION 1: THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK “Man cannot live by the bread of science and politics alone; he also needs the vitamins of ethics and morals, faith and hope, love and security, comfort and attention in the face of death and misfortune, a feeling and experience that as a person he matters infinitely, and assurance that he is not immediately ‘forgotten’ or even annihilated when he dies. These are the elements that religion tries to offer… Religion makes a contribution in man’s search for identity and security... Invisible, unnoticed and even unofficially, the religious traditions of Africa contain the only lasting potentialities for a basis, a foundation and a direction of life for African societies.” John S. Mbiti, African Religions and Philosophy. London: Heinemann, 1989, 2nd edition; p.270. But what kind of Religion? MACHT VERDUMMT (Power makes you stupid) (Nietzsche) Is ours a stupid religion?
  • 3. “Più Sai Più Sei” “He who knows one knows none” (Max Müller) THE DANGER OF ANTHROPOMORPHISM Mortal men believe that gods are begotten, and that they have the dress, voice, and body of mortals... If Oxen, horses, or lions had hands with which to sketch and fashion works of art as men do. Then horses would draw the forms of gods like horses, oxen like oxen, and they would each make their gods’ bodies similar in frame to the bodies that they themselves possess. Indeed, the Ethiopians claim that their gods are snub-nosed and black; the Thracians, that theirs are blue-eyed and red-headed. ... One god there is! Greatest among gods and humankind, in no way like mortals in body or in the thought of his mind. In his entirety, he sees; in his entirety, he thinks; in his entirety, he hears. Always in the same place, he remains, moving not at all; it is not fitting that he should shift about now here and, then, elsewhere. But holding aloof from toil, he sets all things aquiver with the thought of his mind.
  • 4. (Xenophanes, ca. 560-478 B.C.E.) Stanley Rosen, ed., The Examined Life: Readings From Western Philosophers From Plato to Kant. (New York: Random House, 2000); pp.6-7. FAITH AND REASON: THE INDISPENSABLE ROLE OF CRITICAL THINKING KORAN The Koran begins (after the Exordium) with the following words: “This book is not to be doubted. It is a guide for the righteous, who have faith in the unseen and are steadfast in prayer… as for the unbelievers… grievous punishment awaits them.” (Surah 2:2) THE BIBLE (2Timothy 3,1-17): “…All scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for refutation, for correction, and for training in righteousness, so that one who belongs to God may be competent, equipped for every good work.” · 1Peter 3, 13-17 and 2 Peter 1, 1-11: “Now who is going to harm you if you are enthusiastic for what is good? ... Always be ready to give an explanation to anyone who asks you for a reason for your hope, but do it with gentleness and reverence, keeping your conscience clear so that when you are
  • 5. maligned, those who defame your good conduct in Christ may themselves be put to shame.” (1Peter 3, 13-17) “Make every effort to supplement your faith with virtue, virtue with knowledge, knowledge with self-control, self-control with endurance, endurance with devotion, devotion with mutual affection, mutual affection with love…” (2 Peter 1, 1-11) THE ALLEGORY STRATEGY IN THE READING OF SACRED TEXTS Celsus’ critique of Christianity and Judaism “Christians hold many irrational opinions, and they are upset when a logical investigation of their doctrines shows inconsistencies and difficulties. They simply cannot think critically. They despise philosophy and logic, and claim that their holy scriptures lead them to ultimate truth. Christians believe a myth that God wrote their commandments. Both the Jewish Scriptures and the Christian teachings are full of myths. Their entire scriptures both of law, the prophets, and about Jesus are full of myths. The myth among us that Plato had a virgin birth was rejected by us, realizing that some overly
  • 6. ambitious followers who did not know him created the myth. Greeks do not believe Greek fables, but Jews and Christians believe theirs to be actual history. Against all history and reason, the Christians are determined to believe their myths. The Bible is replete with ludicrous legends and myths that are allegorized by Christians to save face and the embarrassment they give when taken literally. .Many biblical stories are so ridiculous that they take refuge in allegories. All wise men know that the allegory game is an admission of a rather stupid story. Mosaic cosmology is contrary to science. The creation periods of “days” before days existed shows as lack of both logic and science. Christians realize that Moses is incorrect, but hide it by means of allegorical interpretations. Christians believe that the world is not even 10,000 years old because they rely, not on science and logic, but Moses’ books. Neither Jew nor Christian has ever invented anything in science….Like all quacks they (Christians) gather a crowd of slaves, children, women and idlers. I speak bitterly about this because I feel bitterly. When we are invited to the Mysteries the masters use another tone. They say, Come to us you who are of clean hands and pure speech, you who are unstained by crime, who have a good conscience towards God, who have done justly and lived uprightly. The Christians say, Come to us you who are sinners, you who are fools or children, you who are miserable, and you shall enter into the kingdom of Heaven: the rogue, the thief, the burglar, the poisoner, the despoiler of temples and tombs, these are their proselytes... Jesus, they say, was sent to save sinners; was he not sent to help those who have kept themselves free from sin? They pretend that God will save the unjust man if he repents and humbles himself. The just man who has held steady from the cradle in the ways of virtue He will not look upon. He pours scorn upon the exorcists; who were clearly in league with the demons themselves – and upon the excesses of the itinerant and undisciplined prophets who roam through cities and camps and commit to everlasting fire cities and lands and their inhabitants… Above all Christians are disloyal, and every
  • 7. church is an illicit collegium, an insinuation deadly at any time, but especially so under Marcus Aurelius. Why cannot Christians attach themselves to the great philosophic and political authorities of the world? A properly understood worship of gods and demons is quite compatible with a purified monotheism, and they might as well give up the mad idea of winning the authorities over to their faith, or of hoping to attain anything like universal agreement on divine things." (From Origen’s “Contra Celsum”) · “Once you have learned how to ask questions - relevant and appropriate and substantial questions - you have learned how to learn and no one can keep you from learning whatever you want or need to know.” (Neil Postman and Charles Weingartner) “What is most thought provoking in our thought-provoking time is that we are still not thinking. We are still not thinking, although the state of the world is becoming constantly more thought- provoking.” (Martin Heidegger, Was Heisst Denken?) It is hard to suppress a certain disgust when contemplating men’s action upon the world stage. For one finds, in spite of apparent wisdom in detail that everything, taken as a whole, is interwoven with stupidity,
  • 8. childish vanity, often with childish viciousness and destructiveness. In the end, one does not know what kind of conception one should have of our species which is so conceited about its superior qualities. (Immanuel Kant, Idea for a Universal History with Cosmopolitan Intent, 1784. in Carl J. Friedrich, The Philosophy of Kant. Immanuel Kant’s Moral and Political Writings. New York: The Modern Library, 1993; p.129). · “Normally persons talk about other people’s religions as they are, and about their own as it ought to be.” (Wilfred Cantwell Smith, 1962). “We judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing, while others judge us by what we have already done.” (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow) “THE ONLY THING I KNOW IS THAT I KNOW THAT I DO NOT KNOW.” (SOCRATES).
  • 9. “THE UNEXAMINED LIFE IS NOT WORTH LIVING.” (Socrates in Plato’s The Apology). “Cogito Ergo Sum” (I think therefore I am) René Descartes “Reason is the Substance of the Universe” Hegel “THE UNEXAMINED RELIGIONIS NOT WORTH BELIEVING.” (Mutombo) · “Uncertainty, in the presence of vivid hopes and fears, is painful, but must be endured if we wish to live without the support of comforting fairy tales. It is not good to forget the questions that philosophy asks, or to persuade ourselves that we have found indubitable answers to them. To teach how to live without certainty, and yet without being paralyzed by hesitation, is perhaps the chief thing that philosophy, in our age, can still do for those who study it.” (Bertrand Russell). A succint definition of Philosophy of religion (by Edgar S. Brightman): “Philosophy of religion is an attempt to discover by rational
  • 10. interpretation of religion and its relations to other types of experience, the truth of religious beliefs and the value of religious attitudes and practices.” 5 Tasks of Philosophy of religion according to William J. Abraham (1) to clarify the central concepts of religion, (2) to examine the internal consistency of religious concepts, (3) to scrutinize the philosophical presupposition of faith statements; (4) to examine the philosophical presuppositions and consistencies of statements made by apologists or assailants of religion. (5) to explore the relationship between religion and other areas of life; Philosophy of religion provides religion with the power of critical thinking and self-examination. In so doing it helps religion to become 1. More Credible 2. More Authentic
  • 11. 3. More Meaningful 4. More Religious (by overcoming Anthropomorphism, and man-made rules) 5. More mature (less childish, less stupid, less tyrannical, less fanatical) 6. Coherent (avoid unnecessary contradictions) 7. Reasonable 8. To distinguish what is essential in religion from superficial paraphernalia 9. To curb fanaticism and religious violence (to make religion more divine and more humane) 10. To Defend the raison d’etre of religion with solid arguments ONLY ONE WAY OF SALVATION? A. THE CHRISTIAN PERSPECTIVE Jesus said to him: “I am the Way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me. If you know me, you will know my Father also.” (John 14, 6-7) And Jesus said to his disciples: “Go into the whole world and proclaim the gospel to every creature.
  • 12. Whoever believes and is baptised will be saved; Whoever does not believe will be condemned.” (Mark 16,14-18) “In Christendom Heresy was prosecuted as a crime that undermined the religious foundation of society.” (Paul E. Capetz, God: A Brief History, p.43). “Do not invoke the names of other gods; do not let them be heard on your lips.” (Ex.23,13) “Whoever sacrifices to any god, other than the Lord alone, shall be devoted to destruction.” (Exodus 22:19, and Deut.13: 1-17) Deuteronomy 13: 6-11 (on idol worship) If anyone secretly entices you - even if it is your brother, your father’s son or your mother’s son, or your own son or daughter, or the wife you embrace, or your most intimate friend - saying, “Let us go worship other gods,” whom neither you nor your ancestors have known, any of the gods of the peoples that are around you, whether near you or far away from you, from one end of the earth to the other, you must not yield to or heed any
  • 13. such persons. Show them no pity or compassion and do not shield them. But you shall surely kill them; your own hand shall be first against them to execute them, and afterwards the and of all the people. Stone them to death for trying to turn you away from the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. Then all Israel shall hear and be afraid, and never again do any such wickedness. “Then God spoke all these words: I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery; you shall have no other gods before me. You shall not make for yourself an idol, whether in the form of anything that is in heaven above, or that is on the earth beneath, - or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I am a jealous God, punishing children for the iniquity of parents, to the third and the fourth generation of those who reject me, but showing steadfast love to the thousandth generation of those who love me and keep my commandments.”
  • 14. (Ex.20,1-6). “The heathen in his blindness bows down to wood and stone.” Psalms 115: Why should the nations say, “where is their God?” Our God is in heaven; whatever God wills is done. Their idols are silver and gold, The work of human hands They have mouths but do not speak, Eyes but do not see. They have ears but do not hear, Noses but do not smell. They have hands but do not feel, Feet but do not walk, And no sound rises from their throats. Their makers shall be like them, all who trust in them. The house of Israel trusts in the Lord Who is their help and shield. “Because of Jesus Christ, Christianity understands itself as the absolute religion, intended for all men, which cannot recognize
  • 15. any other religion beside itself as of equal right… This pluralism is a greater threat and a reason for greater unrest for Christianity than for any other religion. For no other religion – not even Islam – maintains so absolutely that it is the religion, the one and only valid revelation of the one living God as does the Christian religion. The fact of the pluralism of religions, which endures and still from time to time becomes virulent and even after a history of 2000 years, must therefore be the greatest scandal and the greatest vexation for Christianity.” (Karl Rahner, “Christianity and the Non-Christian Religions” in Theological Investigations, vol.5.; Baltimore: Helicon, 1966; pp.118,116). “It has been axiomatic to Christians that Christianity is the true religion, and that others are at best varyingly less true. But this axiom, given the initial perceptual grid, has generated inevitable perplexities in which the Christian theology of religions has become hopelessly entangled. If God is the God of all humanity, why is the true religion, the right approach to God, confined to a single strand of human history, so that it has been unavailable to the great majority of the thousands of millions of human beings who have lived and died from the earliest days until now? If God is the Creator and Father of all, can God have provided true religion only for a chosen minority? Why, within God’s providence, has humanity’s religious life taken the pluralistic form which history shows us?” John Hick, “Foreword” to Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s “The Meaning and End of Religion” (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1991); pp.v-vii. B. THE ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE “The only true faith in God’s sight is Islam.” (Surah 3:19) “He that chooses a religion other than Islam, it will not be
  • 16. accepted for him, and in the world to come he will be one of the lost.” (Surah 3:85) Qur’an, Surah 9:1-20 Proclaim a woeful punishment to the unbelievers…. When the sacred months are over slay the idolaters wherever you find them. Arrest them, besiege then, and lie in ambush everywhere for them For idolaters are ignorant men… evil is what they do… Do you fear them? Surely God is more deserving of your fear if you are true believers. Make war on them: God will chastise them at your hands and humble them… Those who have embraced the Faith, and left their homes; and fought for God’s cause with their wealth and with their persons, are held in higher regard by God. Qur’an, Surah 5:24-40 Those that make war against God and his apostle and spread disorder in the land shall be slain or crucified or have their hands and feet cut off on alternate sides, or be banished from the land. They shall be held up to shame in this world and sternly punished in the hereafter: except those that repent before you reduce them. For you must know that God is forgiving and merciful.
  • 17. Believers, have fear of God and seek the right path to Him. Fight valiantly for His cause, so that you may triumph. As for the unbelievers…woeful punishment awaits them. As for the man or woman who is guilty of theft, cut off their hands to punish them for their crimes. That is the punishment enjoined by God. God is mighty and wise…Did you not know that God has sovereignty over the heavens and the earth? He punishes whom He will and forgives whom He pleases. God has power over all things. ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM From Farid Esack, Qur’an Liberation and Pluralism: An Islamic perspective on interreligious solidarity against oppression. (Oxford: one world,1997) p.xi. The Muslim scholar Farid warns us against the distortion of Islam through the imposition of a Christian theological category. However, he points out that there are some tendencies in Islam that have the characteristics of fundamentalism. He identifies 7 major characteristics of “Islamic Fundamentalism.” Islamic fundamentalism, as popularized in much of the Western
  • 18. media, represents a stereotype with pejorative and disparaging connotations. It is often sweeping in its generalization and insensitive to the many nuances in the world of contemporary Islam. However, in contemporary Islamic discourse there is a tendency that can appropriately be described as fundamentalism (and which mutatis mutandis has striking similarities with Christian Fundamentalism). 7 major characteristics of Islamic Fundamentalism: 1. A denial of any virtue in non-Islam; 2. enmity towards all who reject fundamentalist views as people who have chosen Evil against Good; 3. A commitment to the establishment of an Islamic state wherein the sovereignty of God, juxtaposed against popular sovereignty, would be supreme. 4. A belief in the necessity of enforcing the shari’ah as fundamentalists understand it to have been practised in the Muhammadan era in Medina; 5. A commitment to strict religious practice; 6. A commitment to observance of the text (literal reading of the Koran) 7. An unhistorical view of Islam as capable of permanently solving all the problems of humankind. Christian Fundamentalism
  • 19. "Jesus Christ is the only way of salvation". Accept the whole Bible as the infallible "word of God". Fundamentalists tend toward a literalist reading of the Sacred Texts. A survey by the Gallup organization in 1980 found that 40% of the American public claimed to believe that the Bible is the “actual word of God and is to be taken literally, word for word.” Malise Ruthven, Fundamentalism: The Search for Meaning. (Oxford University Press, 2004); “To look at American religion and to overlook Evangelicalism and Fundamentalism would be comparable to scanning the American physical landscape and missing the Rocky Mountains… As extreme and outdated as the Evangelical model of understanding other religions might seem, the Evangelical voice must be heard. What might appear as extreme in this voice flows from a deep concern for what Evangelicals deem to be the heart of Christianity. To dismiss Evangelical attitudes as outdated is simply to ignore the fact that these attitudes do represent a strong, and an increasingly louder, voice within the Christian population. Paul F. Knitter, No Other Name? A Critical Survey of Christian Attitudes Towards the World Religions. (New York: Orbis Books, 1985) Because of its belief in “Manifest Destiny” ideology, in literal reading of the Bible, in the Apocalyptic Armageddon war,
  • 20. and its opposition to science, and to Women’s right in the Church or in the society at large, Because of its support to arms industry, its glorification of the US military and militarism, and its support of US wars against foreign nations, and US economic exploitation of poor nations, Because of its “uncritical” and somehow immature approach to moral values, its love for weapons and war, its impact on the environment, its baleful role in US foreign policy toward other nations, America’s religiosity is a problem, a major source of instability and violence in the world. American fundamentalists are - a headache, a thorn in the flesh of the bien-pensant liberals, - the subject of bemused concern to ‘Old Europeans’ who have experienced too many real catastrophes to yearn for Armageddon, - They inconvenience women, and oppose scientific progress But they are not a danger only to America, they are also a danger to the whole World and to the planet earth itself. - On a planetary level they are selfish, greedy, and stupid,
  • 21. damaging the environment by the excessive use of energy and lobbying against environmental controls. What is the point of saving the planet, they argue, if Jesus is arriving tomorrow? Malise Ruthven, Fundamentalism: The Search for Meaning. (Oxford University Press, 2004); pp. 59; 1-34; 216-217. THE FUNDAMENTALISM MOVEMENT (1910-2004) Fundamentalism is reactionary, it is the need to return to the “good old days.” It is guided by “fear” of loosing control with the rise of governments where secular rulers are independent from the diktat of religious leaders. It stands as a reaction to the rise of democracy, Multiculturalism, individual freedom, technology (industrial revolution, modern science), Marxism, socialism and communism, and feminism or the emancipation of women and sexual revolution. Some fundamentalists are people who are alienated or excluded from competition in the new world. Others are merely guided by their religious passion, or by the will to power. But others view themselves as the most enlightened and lovers of God. In the recent decades, fundamentalists have added POLITICAL ACTIVISM to their agendas. They want to rule the world and bring it back to what they regard as “order” and spiritual values, decency, and dignity. Although associated with the South, the poor and uneducated people, Fundamentalism had its key roots at Princeton Seminary where conservative Presbyterians resistant to the theory of biological evolution and innovations in biblical interpretation defended the literal truth of the Bible and such doctrines as Jesus’s virgin birth and Resurrection.
  • 22. From England came “dispensational premillennialism,” which divided human history into biblically defined epochs or “dispensations” and anticipated the return of Jesus to inaugurate the millennium, followed by the cataclysmic end of time. These doctrines were spread nationwide by a network of evangelists and Bible institutes centered on Dwight L. Moody (1837-99) and his Chicago institute and, after 1876, through an annual interdenominational conference series at Niagara, New York. 16th century: Protestant reformation and Council of Trent 18th century: collapse of Theocracies, Rise of Democracy and Human rights movements 1776: American Revolution 1789: French Revolution 19th century: Industrial revolution (triumph of modern science) and rise of Evolutionism 1859: Publication of Charles Darwin’s The Evolution of Species 1876-1900: Bible conferences held by many Christian conservatives throughout the USA 1910: publication of “The Fundamentals” (12 volumes) 1925: The “1925 Scopes trial” (in Dayton, Tennessee). The “1925 Scopes trial” constitute the most sensational expression of early fundamentalism, in which Fundamentalists successfully but embarrassingly defended a state law outlawing
  • 23. the teaching of evolution in public schools. This occurred in Dayton, Tennessee The “fundamental beliefs of Protestantism”: (according to the document “the Fundamentals”): 1. The inerrancy of the Bible 2. Creationism or the direct ex nihilo creation of the world, and humanity (and rejection of the Darwinian theory of Evolution) 3. the authenticity of miracles 4. the virgin birth of Jesus 5. Jesus’ crucifixion 6. Jesus’ bodily resurrection 7. the substitutionary atonement (the doctrine that Christ died to redeem the sins of humanity) 8.(for some but not all believers) Jesus’ imminent return to judge and rule over the world I must add to this list: 9. LITERALISM: literalistic reading of the Bible , miracles and prophecies. 10. SOLA FIDE 11.
  • 24. SOLA SCRIPTURA 12. EXCLUSIVISM: Salvation only through Christ (Discrimination, exclusion, elimination) 13. “the arrogance of faith” and delusional “self-righteousness.” 14. LIBIDO DOMINANDI (obsession to control the lives of others) 15. SEXISM AND PATRIARCHY 16. ANTI-MODERNISM, ANTI-INTELLECTUALISM. 17. ANTI-ENVIRONMENTALISM 18. DUALISM AND MANICHEAN VIEW OF THE WORLD 19. THEOCRATIC TENDENCIES (opposition to Democracy and Human Rights) 20. Tendency to support problematic social and political practices: - Overly patriotic: Jingoism, narrow nationalism, imperialism. - supports death penalty (while condemning abortion)
  • 25. - supports militarism and imperialistic wars; - supports capitalism FUNDAMENTALISM as a term is a product of Protestantism. PROTESTANT FUNDAMENTALISM is the original form. Later on it was applied to Catholics, Jews, and recently to Muslims, Hindus, etc. PROTESTANT FUNDAMENTALISM is opposed to - MODERNITY - The rise of Catholics, Jews, women and Minorities (they think they have lost America) CATHOLIC FUNDAMENTALISM is a reaction to - PROTESTANTISM - MODERNITY - DEMOCRACY, FRENCH REVOLUTION, AMERICAN REVOLUTION - VATICAN II (openness to other religions) - FREEDOM FROM THE HIERARCHY - LIBERATION THEOLOGY (economically conservative, opposition to the poor) ANTI-MODERNISM AND CATHOLIC FUNDAMENTALISM 18th - 20th century, until 1965 (from Pius VI to Paul VI)
  • 26. The Church rejecting Democracy and Human Rights, especially 1) Freedom of conscience, 2) Freedom of thought 3) Religious Freedom 4) Liberty of Press 5) the principle of separation between Church and State 6) Ordination of Women As 1) Madness 2) False and absurd principle (Error) 3) contrary to Reason
  • 27. 4) contrary to God’s Revelation 5) negation of Truth 6) DANGEROUS ERROR PUNISHMENT (Church’s response to “Error”) 1. Excommunication 2. Index 3. Inquisition (Torture, Burning at stake) Inquisition (12th-17th century - 21st century), later it was called Holy Office (1908-1965) and finally Congregation for the doctrine of Faith (since 1965) 4. Persecution of Heretics 5. CRUSADES against non-Christians 6. Burning women (accused of witchcraft) 7. Burning intellectuals, scientists, free-thinkers
  • 28. ANTI-MODERNISM (18th-20th CENTURY) The Church’s opposition to Science, Democracy and Human Rights. Pius VI (1775-1799) condemned the French Declaration of Human Rights Gregory XVI (1831-1846) condemned the French Declaration of Human Rights Pope Pius IX (1846-1878) and Pius X (1903-1914): Syllabus Errorum (1864; 1907). The Vatican condemnations of * a Syllabus of Errors in 1864, * Americanism in 1899, * Modernism in 1907 CONTEXT: 1776: American Revolution and Declaration of Independence 1789: French Revolution and declaration of the rights of man and citizen. 1859: Darwin’s book on Evolution 1870: Infallibility of the Pope proclaimed as a dogma
  • 29. ANTI-MODERNISM (SYLLABUS OF ERRORS) The Church condemned the following as “enemies of God, religion, and humanity itself” - Kantian philosophy: Enlightenment, Rationalism, and criticism, - separation of church and state in France, - Democracy, - Human Rights, especially religious freedom - Emancipation of women - Galileo and Modern Science - and even state-sponsored solutions to poverty. Before Vatican II, Pius VI (1775-1799) regarded the French declaration of the rights of man and citizens of 1789 as madness and condemned it in 1791. He declared in his document Quod aliquantum that the principle of liberty as declared by the French charter of human rights was contrary to reason and to God’s Revelation. Continuing in the same spirit, in 1832, Pope Gregory XVI condemned liberty of conscience as “the false, absurd, mad principle” (deliramentum), “the most contagious of errors.” He added: “to this error (liberty of conscience) is attached liberty of press, the most dangerous liberty, an execrable liberty, which can never inspire sufficient horror.”
  • 30. In his encyclical Mirari vos (in which he condemned the theology professed by Félicité Robert de Lamennais (1782- 1854) and other French progressive theologians who asked the church to defend freedom and some principles of French declaration of human rights), Gregory XVI condemned this notion of liberty as the “evil-smelling spring of indifferentism” from which flowed the erroneous and absurd opinion - or rather, derangement - that freedom of conscience must be asserted and vindicated for everybody. He added: This most pestilential error opens the door to the complete and immoderate liberty of opinions, which works such widespread harm both in church and state. Some people outrageously maintain that some advantage derives from it for religion. Pope Pius IX (1846-1878) In 1864, Pope Pius IX also condemned religious liberty in his Syllabus Errorum as one of the grave errors of modern liberalism. The Catholic Church was not alone in this opposition to human rights. As Abba Hillel Silver pointed out, “Religion was not only tardy in championing human rights; at times it was actually retarding and reactionary.” Likewise Eric Weingartner observed that the “Christian church has not historically been in alliance with the pioneers of human rights, whatever their tradition.” Syllabus - From “syllabos” meaning, "collection” · it is the name given to two series of propositions containing
  • 31. · modern religious errors condemned respectively by · Pius IX (1864) and Pius X (1907). Through the Syllabus, the Popes intended to bring together under the form of a Constitution the chief errors of the time and to condemn them. The Syllabus of Errors (80 theses) Condemned by Pope Pius IX Table of Contents The general contents of the Syllabus are summed up in the headings of the ten paragraphs, under which, the 80 theses are grouped. They are: 1.Pantheism, Naturalism, Absolute Rationalism (1-7); 2. Moderate Rationalism (8-14); 3. Indifferentism and false Tolerance in Religious matters (15- 18); 4. Socialism, Communism, Secret Societies, Bible Societies, Liberal Clerical Associations (reference is made to three Encyclicals and two Allocutions of the pope, in which these tendencies are condemned), 5. Errors regarding the Church and its rights (19-38); 6. Errors on the State and its Relation to the Church (39-55); 7. Errors on Natural and Christian Ethics (56-64);
  • 32. 8. Errors on Christian Marriage (65-74); 9. Errors on the Temporal Power of the Pope (75-76); 10. Errors in Connection with Modern Liberalism (77-80). Here is a sample of what the Catholic Church rejected as “errors.” 1) 15. Every man is free to embrace and profess that religion which, guided by the light of reason, he shall consider true. (Allocution "Maxima quidem," June 9, 1862; Damnatio "Multiplices inter," June 10, 1851). 2) 16. Man may, in the observance of any religion whatever, find the way of eternal salvation, and arrive at eternal salvation. (Encyclical "Qui pluribus," Nov. 9, 1846). 3) 17. Good hope at least is to be entertained of the eternal salvation of all those who are not at all in the true Church of Christ. Encyclical "Quanto conficiamur," Aug. 10, 1863, etc. 4) 18. Protestantism is nothing more than another form of the same true Christian religion, in which form it is given to please God equally as in the Catholic Church. -- Encyclical "Noscitis," Dec. 8, 1849. 5) 24. The Church has not the power of using force, nor has she any temporal power, direct or indirect.
  • 33. -- Apostolic Letter "Ad Apostolicae," Aug. 22, 1851. 6) 55. The Church ought to be separated from the State, and the State from the Church. Allocution "Acerbissimum," Sept. 27, 1852. 8) 78. Hence it has been wisely decided by law, in some Catholic countries, that persons coming to reside therein shall enjoy the public exercise of their own peculiar worship. -- Allocution "Acerbissimum," Sept. 27, 1852. 9) on “Religious Freedom” 79. Moreover, it is false that the civil liberty of every form of worship, and the full power, given to all, of overtly and publicly manifesting any opinions whatsoever and thoughts, conduce more easily to corrupt the morals and minds of the people, and to propagate the pest of indifferentism. - Allocution "Nunquam fore," Dec. 15, 1856. CHRISTIANITY AND ANTI-SEMITISM (The impact of Fundamentalist reading of the Bible on Jews) WHAT THE NEW TESTAMENT SAYS ABOUT JEWS 1) Rom 11: 28 2) Mt 27, 1-44 (Focus on Mt 27, 1-2 and 27, 22-25)
  • 34. 3) John18, 29-40 and 19, 1-18 4) Acts 2: 22-23 5) Acts 3: 12 - 17 6) Mt 5: 17 (Mt chapters 5, 6, and 7): fulfillment doctrine 7) Mt 23: 1-38: mocking the Jewish religious leaders 8) John 8: 31-59 9) Rom 3: 21-28; Gal 2: 15-21 and Gal 3:10 10) Acts 4: 8-12 Saint John Chrysostom (344-407 A.D.) declared: “Jews are the most miserable of all men.... lustful, rapacious, greedy, perfidious bandits.... inveterate murderers, destroyers, men possessed by the devil.... whose debauchery and drunkenness have given them the manners of the pig and the lusty goat. They know only one thing, to satisfy their gullets, get drunk, to kill and maim one another.... They have surpassed the ferocity of wild beasts, for they murder their offspring and immolate them to the devil.” As to Judaism, symbolized by the synagogue, it is: an assembly of criminals... a den of thieves...a cavern of devils, an abyss of perdition.... far from venerating the synagogue because of the books it contains, hold it in hatred and aversion for the same reason.... I hate the synagogue precisely because it has the law and prophets.... I hate the Jews also because they outrage the law. Saint Agobard (779-840 A.D.): “Jews are cursed and covered with malediction, as by a cloak. The malediction has penetrated them as water in their entrails
  • 35. and oil in their bones. They are cursed in the city and cursed in the country, cursed is their coming in and their going out. Cursed are the fruits of their loins, of their lands, of their flocks; cursed their cellars, their granaries, their shops, their food, and the crumbs of their tables. Martin Luther (16th century) He declared that Jewish synagogues should be burned and their books seized, that Jews should be forced to work with their hands, or better still, be expelled by the princes, and added these astonishing words: “They should be forced to hardest labor as handymen of serfs only; they should not be permitted to hold services; every Christian should be admonished to deal with them in a merciless manner; if you suffer, strike them on the jaw; if I had the power, I would assemble them to prove to us that we Christians do not worship God, under penalty of having their tongues cut out through the backs of their necks.” Throughout history, Jews constantly worry about 3 things: 1. Anti-Semitism 2. Intermarriage, 3. Assimilation TEN PLAGUES OF JEWISH PERSECUTIONS 1. Slavery in Egypt 2. Assyrians and Exile in Babylonia 3. Greek and Roman colonialism - Antiochus
  • 36. - 70 C.E: Jerusalem and its temple destroyed - 135 (Grand Diapora: Jews dispersed in the Roman empire) 4. Homelessness in Europe (135-1948): Ghetto and distinctive badge 5. Radical anti-semitic laws (excluding Jews from education, economic life, and restrictive of their religion) 6. Crusades 7. Persecution in England and France 8.Russian Pogroms 9.Spanish and Portuguese 10. Holocaust LOCUS OF PERSECUTION (MAJOR EVENTS) 1. Egypt (slavery in Egypt) 2. Assyria and Babylonia (exil, deportation) 3. Hellenistic empire 4. Roman Empire 5. Spain and Portugal 6. Poland 7. France 8. England
  • 37. 9. Russia 10. Germany A Brief history of Jewish persecution Homelessness in Europe (135-1948) - Jewish persecutions under the Byzantines, - Jewish massacres during the Crusades, - Jewish expulsions in England (1290), France (1306), Spain (1492), Portugal (1497), Frankfurt (1614),
  • 38. and Vienna (1670). Jewish pogroms in the Ukraine (1648,1768), Odessa (1871), and throughout Russia, especially after 1881 culminating in Kishinev (1903). 1939-1945: Holocaust (Hitler, Germany) TEN MAJOR ANTI-SEMITIC ACCUSATIONS Jews were constantly accused of 1. Deicide 2. Blasphemy and 3. ritual murder. 10 MAJOR ACCUSATIONS : * 1. Killers of Christ (Deicide people, Christkillers) They Killed Jesus in the past and continue to kill him in the Eucharist, and they make a mockery of his Church (Christian religion): a) Desecrating the sacred host (Eucharist) b) Jews continue to torment Christ by piercing and pounding the sacred bread they steal from Christian churches * 2. Killers of Christians: a) “Blood-libel” charge: Jews commit ritual murder of Christians and use their blood (especially the blood of Christian children)in their rituals, especially to bake unleavened bread for their Passover (this medieval charge continued into the 20th century!)
  • 39. b) During plague period: Jews have poisoned wells of Christians * 3. Do not respect the Christian God, the Christian religion, nor the Christian people. * 4. Immoral * 5. Evil sorcery (because they are the children of the devil) * 6. Greedy (Jews have 2 Gods: Money and the Devil) * 7. Violent * 8. Enemies of the State (bad citizens) * 9. Enemies of Truth and Love * 10. They carry diseases (and kill Christians) In other words, essentially they are Enemies of - 1. God (Christ) - 2. Truth, - 3. Faith (True Religion) - 4. Love (by killing the God of Love, they killed Love) - 5. Decency (decent moral values) - 6. Peace
  • 40. - 7. Culture (dietary laws, prohibition of sculpture or art) - 8. Life - 9. Humanity -10. The State (Bad Citizens, traitors) PUNISHMENT (How Christians punished Jews for their alleged crimes) => => By killing the God of love, by rejecting God (Jesus) they have rejected themselves, and excluded themselves from the realm of love 1. They are cursed by God, and must be cursed by any good Christian; by rejecting the God of Love Jews have rejected themselves. 2. Exclusion from Education and Intellectual life 3. Exclusion from Economic Life 4. Exclusion from Political life (no citizen rights) 5. Exclusion from Legal protection 6. Exclusion from Society (Ghettoization) 7. Exclusion from the realm of religion (burning of Talmud, construction of synagogues prohibited,…) 8. Exclusion from Humanity (enemy of God the Jew is not fully human, and deserves to be exterminated) 20 major historical types of Punishment 1. Forced baptism of Jewish Children, and adult forced to
  • 41. convert to Christian or to live the country 2. Construction of new synagogues prohibited, 3. Burning of the Talmud 4. Jews not permitted to attend schools or universities 5. Jews not permitted to obtain academic degrees. 6. Jews not allowed to hold public office (Synod of Clermont, 535 C.E.); nor to join the Military. 7. Jews not permitted to be plaintiffs or witnesses against Christians in the courts, 3rd Lateran Council, 1179 C/E., Canon 26. 8. Compulsory ghettos 9. The marking of Jewish clothes with a badge, 10. Prohibition to sell or rent real estate to Jews 11. Jews not permitted to withhold inheritance from descendants who had accepted Christianity, 3rd Lateran Council, Canon 26. 12. Prohibition of Sunday work, Synod of Szabolcs, 1092 C.E. 13. Heavy Taxes 14. Seizure of Jewish properties (Jews starved to death) 15. Christians not permitted to patronize Jewish doctors, Trulanic Synod, 692 C.E. 16. Prohibition of intermarriage and of sexual intercourse between Christians and Jews, Synod of Elvira, 306, C.E.
  • 42. 17. Jews and Christians not permitted to eat together, Synod of Elvira, 306 C.E. 18. Mockery 19. Expulsion 20.ELIMINATION, EXTERMINATION: a) Torture b) Massacre and various pogroms c) Holocaust Anti-Semitism and Western religious thought: 2000 years of a symphony of destruction The Wise Anti-Semite (by Jean-Paul Sartre) “There is a disgust for the Jew, just as there is a disgust for the Chinese or the Negro among certain people… If a man attributes all or part of his own misfortunes and those of his country to the presence of Jewish elements in the community, if he proposes to remedy this state of affairs by depriving the Jews of certain of their rights, by keeping them out of certain economic and social activities,
  • 43. by expelling them from the country, by exterminating all of them, we say that he has anti-Semitic opinions. But anti-Semitism is more than mere opinion. “Anti-Semitism is a doctrine that is aimed directly at particular persons and that seeks to suppress their rights or to exterminate them. Anti-Semitism is a free and total choice of oneself, a comprehensive attitude that one adopts not only toward Jews but toward men in general, toward history and society; it is at once and the same time a passion and a conception of the world.” Contrary to a widespread opinion, it is not the Jewish character that provokes anti-Semitism but, rather, it is the anti-Semite who creates the Jew. The primary phenomenon, therefore, is anti-Semitism, a regressive social force and a conception deriving from the prelogical world. A man may be a good father and a good husband, a conscientious citizen, highly cultivated, philanthropic, and in addition an anti-Semite. He may like fishing and the pleasures of love, may be tolerant in matters of religion, full of generous notions on the condition of the natives in Central Africa, and in addition detest the Jews. If he does not like them, we do not accept that a gentleman such as he, can possibly be a racist or an anti-Semite. We call him a wise anti-Semite. We think that he is not really anti-Semite, but rather a man who is careful, prudent and cautious. We hasten to justify him in our mind. We
  • 44. say that if he does not like them it is because his experience has shown him that they are bad, because statistics have taught him that they are dangerous, because certain historical factors have influenced his judgment. Thus this opinion seems to be the result of external causes, and those who wish to study it are prone to neglect the personality of the anti-Semite. But anti-Semitism is not created by the external causes, by the negative characteristics of the Jews. Rather anti-Semitism is something that enters the body from the mind. An anti-Semite person has a “predisposition” to anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism is an involvement of the mind, one so deep-seated and complete that it extends to the physiological realm, as happens in cases of hysteria. This involvement is not caused by experience. Far from experience producing his idea of the Jew, it was the latter which explained his experience. If the Jew did not exist, the anti-Semite would invent him. That may be so, you will say, but leaving the question of experience to one side, must we not admit that anti-Semitism is explained by certain historical data? For after all it does not come out of the air. It would be easy for me to reply that the history of France tells us nothing about the Jews: they were oppressed right up to 1789…I have questioned a hundred people on the reasons for their anti-Semitism. Most of them have confined themselves to enumerating the defects with which tradition has endowed the Jews. “I detest them because they are selfish, intriguing, persistent, oily, tactless, etc.” .” A painter said to me: “I am hostile to the Jews because, with their critical habits, they encourage our servants to insubordination.” A young actor without talent insisted that the Jews had kept him from a successful career in the theater by confining him to subordinate roles. A young woman said to me: I have had the most horrible experiences with furriers; they robbed me, they burned the fur I entrusted to them. Well they
  • 45. were all Jews.” But why did she choose to hate Jews rather than furriers? Why Jews or furriers rather than such and such a Jew or such and such a furrier? Because she had in her a predisposition toward anti-Semitism. A classmate of mine at the lycee told me that Jews “annoy” him because of the thousands of injustices that “Jew-ridden” social organizations commit in their favor. “A Jew passed his aggregation the year I was failed, and you can’t make me believe that that fellow, whose father came from Cracow or Lemberg, understood a poem by Ronsard or an eclogue by Virgil better than I.” But he admitted that he disdained the aggregation as a mere academic exercise, and that he didn’t study for it. Thus, to explain his failure, he made use of two systems of interpretation, like those madmen who, when they are far gone in their madness, pretend to be the King of Hungary but, if questioned sharply, admit to being shoemakers. His thought moved on two planes without his being in the least embarrassed by it. As a matter of fact, he will in time manage to justify his past laziness on the grounds that it really would be too stupid to prepare for an examination in which Jews are passed in preference to good Frenchmen. Actually he ranked twenty-seventh on the official list. There were twenty-six ahead of him, twelve who passed and fourteen who failed. Suppose Jews had been excluded from the competition; would that have done him any good? And even if he had been at the top of the list of unsuccessful candidates, even if by eliminating one of the successful candidates he would have had a chance to pass, why should the Jew Weil have been eliminated rather than the Norman Matthieu or the Breton Arzell? To understand my classmate’s indignation we must recognize that he had adopted in advance a certain idea of the Jew, of his nature and of his role in society. And to be able to decide that among twenty-six competitors who were more successful than himself, it was the Jew who robbed him of his place, he must a priori have given preference in the conduct of his life to reasoning based on
  • 46. passion… Others base their anti-Semitism not on their personal experience, but on history. Leaving the question of experience to one side, must we not admit, they say, that anti-Semitism is explained by certain historical data? For after all it does not come out of the air. It would be easy for me to reply that the history of France tells us nothing about the Jews: they were oppressed right up to 1789; since then they have participated as best they could in the life of the nation, taking advantage, naturally, of freedom of competition to displace the weak, but no more and no less than other Frenchmen. They have committed no crimes against France, have engaged in no treason, even if people believe there is proof that the number of Jewish soldiers in 1914 was lower than it should have been… People quite easily talk about “Jewish treason” as the cause of contemporary anti-Semitism… Let us take the case of Poland and Russia. In the course of the bloody Polish revolts of the nineteenth century, the Warsaw Jews, whom the czars handled gently for reasons of policy, were very lukewarm toward the rebels. By not taking part in the insurrection they were able to maintain and improve their position in a country ruined by repression. I don’t know whether this is true or not. What is certain is that many Poles believe it, and this “historical fact” contributes not a little to their bitterness against the Jews. But if I examine the matter more closely, I discover a vicious circle: the czars, we are told, treated the Polish Jews well whereas they willingly ordered pogroms against those in Russia. These sharply different courses of action had the same cause. The Russian government considered the Jews in both Russia and Poland to be unassimilable; according to the needs of their policy, they had them massacred at Moscow and Kiev because they were a danger to the Russian empire, but favored them at Warsaw as a means of stirring up discord among the Poles. The latter showed nothing but hate and scorn for the Jews of Poland, but the reason was the same: For them Israel could never become an
  • 47. integral part of the national collectivity. Treated as Jews by the czar and as Jews by the Poles, provided, quite in spite of themselves, with Jewish interests in the midst of a foreign community, is it any wonder that these members of a minority behaved in accordance with the representation made of them? In short, the essential thing here is not an “historical fact” but the idea that the agents of history formed for themselves of the Jew. When the Poles of today harbor resentment against the Jews for their past conduct, they are incited to it by that same idea. If one is going to reproach little children for the sins of their grandfathers, one must first of all have a very primitive conception of what constitutes responsibility. Furthermore one must form his conception of the children on the basis of what the grandparents have been. One must believe that what the elders did the young are capable of doing. One must convince himself that Jewish character is inherited. Thus the Poles of 1940 treated the Israelites in the community as Jews because their ancestors in 1848 had done the same with their contemporaries… It is therefore the idea of the Jew that one forms for himself which would seem to determine history, not the “historical fact” that produces the idea. People speak to us also of “social facts.” But if we look at this more closely we shall find the same vicious circle. There are too many Jewish lawyers, someone says. But is there any complaint that there are too many Norman lawyers? Even if all the Bretons were doctors would we say anything more than that “Britanny provides doctors for the whole of France”? Oh, someone will answer, it is not at all the same thing. No doubt, but that is precisely because we consider Normans as Normans and Jews as Jews. Wherever we turn it is the ideas of the Jew which seems to be the essential thing. Anti-Semitism precedes the facts that are supposed to call it forth; it seeks them out to
  • 48. nourish itself upon them; it must even interpret them in a special way so that they may become truly offensive. Finally there is the religious history. The facts of the problem appear as follows: a concrete historical community is basically national and religious; but the Jewish community, which once was both, has been deprived bit by bit of both these concrete characteristics. Its dispersion implies the breaking up of common traditions. Its twenty centuries of dispersion and political impotence forbid its having a historic past. If it is true, as Hegel says, that a community is historical to the degree that it remembers its history, then the Jewish community is the least historical of all, for it keeps a memory of nothing but a long martyrdom. It is neither their past, their religion, nor their soil that unites the sons of Israel. If they have a common bond, if all of them deserve the name of Jew, it is because they have in common the situation of a Jew, that is they live in a community which takes them for Jews. In a word, the Jew is perfectly assimilable by modern nations, but he is to be defined as one whom these nations do not wish to assimilate. What weighed upon him originally was that he was the assassin of Christ. Have we ever stopped to consider the intolerable situation of men condemned to live in a society that adores the God they have killed? Originally, the Jew was therefore a murderer or the son of a murderer – which in the eyes of a community with a pre-logical concept of responsibility amounts inevitably to the same thing – it was as such that he was taboo. It is evident that we cannot find the explanation for modern anti-Semitism here; but if the anti-Semite has chosen the Jew as the object of his hate, it is because of the religious horror that the latter has always inspired. This horror has had a curious economic effect. If the medieval church tolerated the Jews when she could have assimilated them by force or massacred them, it was because they filled a vital economic function. Accursed, they followed a cursed but indispensable vocation; being unable to own land or serve in the army, they trafficked in money, which a Christian
  • 49. could not undertake without defiling himself. Thus the original curse was soon reinforced by an economic curse, and it is above all the latter that has persisted. Today we reproach the Jews for following unproductive activities, without taking into account the fact that their apparent autonomy within the nation comes from the fact that they were originally forced into these trades by being forbidden all others. Thus it is no exaggeration to say that it is the Christians who have created the Jew in putting an abrupt stop to his assimilation and in providing him, in spite of himself, with a function in which he has since prospered. But modern society has seized on this memory and has made it the pretext and the base for its anti-Semitism. Thus, to know what the contemporary Jew is, we must ask the Christian conscience. And we must ask, not “What is a Jew?” but “What have you made of the Jews?” The Jew is one whom other men consider a Jew: that is the simple truth from which we must start. In this sense the democrat is right as against the anti-Semite, for it is the anti- Semite who makes the Jew. But it would be wrong to say that the distrust, the curiosity, the disguised hostility the Israelites find around them are no more than the intermittent demonstrations of a few hotheads. Primarily, anti-Semitism is the expression of a primitive society that, though secret and diffused, remains latent in the legal collectivity. We must not suppose, therefore, that a generous outburst of emotion, a few pretty words, a stroke of the pen will suffice to suppress it. That would be like imagining you could abolish war by denouncing its effects in a book. The Jew no doubt sets a proper value on the sympathy shown him, but it cannot prevent his seeing anti- Semitism as a permanent structure of the community in which he lives. For a Jew, conscious and proud of being Jewish, asserting his claim to be a member of the Jewish community without ignoring on that account the bonds which unite him to the national
  • 50. community, there may not be so much difference between the anti-Semite and the democrat. The former wishes to destroy him as a man and leave nothing in him but the Jew, the pariah, the untouchable; the latter wishes to destroy him as a Jew and leaving nothing in him but the man, the abstract and universal subject of the rights of man and the rights of the citizen. Thus there may be detected in the most liberal democrat a tinge of anti-Semitism; he is hostile to the Jew to the extent that the latter thinks of himself as a Jew…The anti-Semite reproaches the Jew with being Jewish; the democrat reproaches him with willfully considering himself a Jew. Between his enemy and his defender, the Jew is in a difficult situation: apparently he can do no more than choose the sauce with which he will be devoured. We must now ask ourselves the question: does the Jew exist? And if he exists, what is he? Is he first a Jew or first a man? Is the solution of the problem to be found in the extermination of all the Israelites or in their total assimilation? But what kind of assimilation? Isn’t assimilation itself another way of killing the Jewishness of the Jew, and therefore another way of exterminating the Jews? Some people think that anti- Semitism will disappear when Jews become fully Frenchmen. Thus they ask Jews to hasten this integration. And some propose drastic means to speed the process of assimilation. Thus some advocate the policy of mixed marriages and a rigorous interdiction against Jewish religious practices – in particular, circumcision. There are even some Jews who suggest that all Jews be forced to change their names. I say quite simply: these measures would be inhumane. No democracy can seek integration of the Jews at such a cost. Such a policy of integration aims at nothing less than the liquidation of the Jewish race. It represents an extreme form of the tendency we have noticed in the democrat, a tendency purely and simply to suppress the Jew for the sake of the man. But the man does not exist; there are Jews, Protestants, Catholics; there are Frenchmen, Englishmen, Germans; there are whites, blacks, yellows. Certainly Jews would wish to integrate themselves in
  • 51. the nation, but as Jews, not as abstract men. All persons who through their work collaborate toward the greatness of a country have the full rights of citizens of that country. What gives them this right is not the possession of a problematic and abstract “human nature,” but their active participation in the life of the society. This means, then, that the Jews – and likewise the Arabs and the Negroes – from the moment that they are participants in the national enterprise, have a right in that enterprise; they are citizens. But they have these rights as Jews, Negroes, or Arabs – that is, as concrete persons. In societies where women vote, they are not asked to change their sex when they enter the voting booth; the vote of a woman is worth just as much as that of a man, but it is as a woman that she votes, with her womanly intuitions and concerns, in her full character of a woman. When it is a question of the legal rights of the Jew, and of the more obscure but equally indispensable rights that are not inscribed in any code, he must enjoy those rights not as a potential Christian but precisely as a French Jew. It is with his character, his customs, his tastes, his religion if he has one, his name, and his physical traits that we must accept him. What is needed to overcome anti-Semitism is not to appeal to the generosity of the Aryans – with even the best of them, that virtue is in eclipse. What must be done is to point out to each one that the fate of the Jews is his fate. Not one Frenchman will be free so long as the Jews do not enjoy the fullness of their rights. Not one Frenchman will be secure so long as a single Jew – in France or in the world at large – can fear for his life. (Jean-Paul Sartre, Anti-Semite and Jew. New York: Schocken Books, 1976). Christian Theology and Anti-Semitism (A case of epistemic violence and theological terrorism).
  • 52. No one would disagree with the assessment that Christians, over the centuries, have been guilty of anti-Semitism, sometimes with barbarous results. The real question is not whether individual Christians have been antisemites, but whether anti- Semitism is somehow ingrained in the very roots of Christianity, in its very essence. Rosemary Ruether has declared that anti-Semitism is the “other side of Christology,” the inevitable fallout of placing Jesus at the right hand of the Father. Here is the way Rosemary Ruether articulated the problem of anti-Semitism in Christian theology: The examination of the two thousand year old Christian tradition of anti-Judaism; the suggestion that this tradition brought forth the evil fruits of many centuries of victimization and pogroms, and contributed in basic ways to the Nazi “final solution,” raises tremendous anxiety for Christians. It is the subject that remains shrouded in a conspiracy of silence. Christian catechetics from the grade school to the seminary level dutifully repeats its traditions about the Jewish origins of Christian faith, and the supercession of Judaism by Christianity. Christians learn early to love the “good” Old Testament Jews and hate the “bad” New Testament Jews; i.e., scribes, Pharisees, High Priests and simply “the Jews.” But what happened to Jewish Christian relations after that is a blank in Christian education. Facts about the long history of Christian persecution of the Jews, well known to their Jewish neighbors, are unknown to Christians. As always, the victims remember; the victors forget. Consequently when Christians first begin to absorb some of this hidden history, there is at first a great incredulity. It seems impossible that all this could have happened for so long, and we have never heard of it!
  • 53. FRIDAY PRAYER FOR THE CONVERSION OF JEWS, PROTESTANTS, ORTHODOX, PAGANS, ETC. It is worth noting that the full prayer also calls for the conversion of other groups - not just Jews - including Protestants, Orthodox, and pagans. On Monday, February 4, 2008, Pope Benedict XVI made public a revised prayer for the Jews to be used in the "Solemn Prayers" of the traditional Good Friday service. Starting with Good Friday 2008, the prayer will become a permanent part of the Roman Missal of 1962, used for the celebration of the Traditional Latin Mass. The pope used Romans 11:24-26 as the basis for the revised prayer. In July 2007, Pope Benedict XVI, in his motu proprioSummorum Pontificum, restored the Traditional Latin Mass as one of the two approved forms of the Mass. To that mass he now added the revision of "Solemn Prayers" that are prayed on Good Friday. These prayers are offered for the Church and all Catholics, then for non-Catholic Christians, then for the Jews, and finally for pagans. While each prayer is different, the point is the same: to acknowledge that Jesus Christ, by His Death and Resurrection, is the salvation of all mankind. Therefore, the prayers ask that Catholics may be strengthened in their faith; that non-Catholic Christians may come to the fullness of the Catholic Faith; and that Jews and pagans may come to recognize Christ as their savior. In other words, the hope is that all will be saved through faith in Christ. Most of those who desired the prayers to be changed wanted the
  • 54. prayer for the conversion of the Jews either dropped or changed in such a way that it no longer was a prayer for conversion. The new text reads, in Latin (the language in which it will be prayed): Oremus et pro Iudaeis. Ut Deus et Dominus noster illuminet corda eorum, ut agnoscant Iesum Christum salvatorem omnium hominum. Oremus. Flectamus genua. Levate. Omnipotens sempiterne Deus, qui vis ut omnes homines salvi fiant et ad agnitionem veritatis veniant, concede propitius, ut plenitudine gentium in Ecclesiam Tuam intrante omnis Israel salvus fiat. Per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen. ENGLISH TRANSLATION: "Let us pray also for the Jews that the Lord our God may illuminate their hearts and that they also may acknowledge Our Lord Jesus Christ." The old Latin text prayed for the conversion of the Jews, calling on God to deliver "that people...from its darkness" and to remove the "blindness" (a term which was adapted from an Epistle of St. Paul).
  • 55. After the publication of the Motu, which re-introduced the pre- Conciliation Mass, many in the Hebrew world were concerned. The Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem, and spiritual guides of the Sephardic and Aschenazi communities wrote to Pope Benedict XVI to ask that the Good Friday prayer be altered. Under Pope Pius XII, it was instructed that "pro perfidis judaeis" was meant to refer to "Jews who have no faith." Pius XII also reintroduced the genuflection for that prayer. Under Pope John XXIII, the term "perfidis" was eliminated, along with the succeeding reference to "perfidious Jewery." Kenneth J. Wolfe, a columnist for the traditionalist Catholic newspaper The Remnant, said that traditionalists would have preferred no change at all. Wolfe said that the change "rattles the cage of traditionalists", and would likely make more difficult any rapprochement with traditionalists groups like the Society of St. Pius X, who reject the Second Vatican Council and have appointed their own bishops. Rabbi David Rosen, director of inter-religious affairs for the American Jewish Committee said that although he was pleased that the offensive terms were removed from the prayer, he still objected to the new prayer because it specified that Jews should find redemption specifically in Christ. Reaction of Rabbi Walter Homolka (Prominent German Rabbi, executive director of the Abraham Geiger College at the University of Potsdam, Germany): By promoting this prayer for the conversion of Jews, Pope Benedict XVI indicates that he believes that the path to salvation, even for Jews, can only go through Jesus, the savior. This opens the floodgates for the conversion of Jews. The Internet is already full of comments by conservative, right-wing Catholics who say: "Wonderful, now we finally have the signal to convert the Jews." This kind of signal has an extremely provocative effect on anti-Semitic groups. The Catholic Church
  • 56. does not have its anti-Semitic tendencies under control. The Pope is making, on a central liturgical occasion, namely the Good Friday liturgy, a theological statement that Jews cannot help but perceive as aggressive and crass. Throughout history, Jews have repeatedly been subjected to persecution and death on Good Friday. Christians have often translated the message of Good Friday into the question: "Where are the murderers of Christ?" In 2006, the chairman of the General Rabbinical Council of Germany, Rabbi Henry Brandt, expressed himself in very clear words to (leading German theologian) Cardinal Walter Kasper. He said that any approach to the possibility of a mission by the Church to convert Jews is essentially a hostile act -- a continuation, on a different level, of Hitler's crimes against the Jews. These are strong but honest words. The Catholic Church should acknowledge the fidelity of God, who abides by his choice of the nation of Israel as his chosen people. HISTORY OF ANTI-SEMITISM IN CHRISTIANITY From Leonard Swidler, After the Absolute The Dialogical Future of Religious Pluralism. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1990); pp.114-117 Chapter 7. JEWISH-CHRISTIAN DIALOGUE All of the reasons given up until now for Christians entering into dialogue with Jews and Judaism have been fundamentally for the Christian’s sake. There is another reason why Christians must turn toward Jews in dialogue that is only partly for their own sakes, and partly other-directed. a. Antisemitism and Jewish-Christian Dialogue I am speaking of our heinous history of hostility and hatred toward Jews and Judaism for two thousand years. Thank God there are a few spaces of light; Jewish culture, learning and life
  • 57. did in fact flourish in Christendom in certain places and at certain times. Particularly some Christian princes and bishops- and often the papacy-supported and defended the Jews. But as can be seen from careful histories of the Jews, as that of the Catholic historian Frederick M. Schweitzer,1 this was a minor theme in a symphony of destruction. There are whole libraries detailing the ignominy to which Christians have subjected Jews, and consequently with which they have besmirched their own souls. Let us recall only a tiny number of our most saintly antisemites (I would have thought that such reminders were completely superfluous today with the recent calling to consciousness of the horrors of the Holocaust, but just a short time ago at a Protestant-Catholic clergy retreat I found priests and ministers proclaiming the righteousness of the Church in the history of its relations with the Jews. Is such ignorance, or perversity, possible in present-day Christian clergy? Sadly, it is.) Recall the words of the “golden-tongued” St. John Chrysostom (344-407 A.D.), which were uttered not among a small gathering of learned clerics, but were flung from the pulpit in Antioch for all Christians to hear, both there in that heavily Jewish city, and also reverberating through all the subsequent centuries of Christian antisemitic preaching. He thundered that “Jews are the most miserable of all men.... lustful, rapacious, greedy, perfidious bandits.... inveterate murderers, destroyers, men possessed by the devil.... whose debauchery and drunkenness have given them the manners of the pig and the lusty goat. They know only one thing, to satisfy their gullets, get drunk, to kill and maim one another.... They have surpassed the ferocity of wild beasts, for they murder their offspring and immolate them to the devil.” As to Judaism, symbolized by the synagogue, it is:
  • 58. an assembly of criminals... a den of thieves...a cavern of devils, an abyss of perdition.... far from venerating the synagogue because of the books it contains, hold it in hatred and aversion for the same reason.... I hate the synagogue precisely because it has the law and prophets.... I hate the Jews also because they outrage the law. The early ninth century was the time of the Carolingian Renaissance in Western Christendom, and at the height of it we find St. Agobard (779-840 A.D.), powerful Archbishop of Lyons, and known as “probably the most cultured man of his time.” St. Agobard’s words about the Jews sound as if he was standing in a St. John Chrysostom echo-chamber: “Jews are cursed and covered with malediction, as by a cloak. The malediction has penetrated them as water in their entrails and oil in their bones. They are cursed in the city and cursed in the country, cursed is their coming in and their going out. Cursed are the fruits of their loins, of their lands, of their flocks; cursed their cellars, their granaries, their shops, their food, and the crumbs of their tables. The official Church at the highest level also played out the same role of the antisemite. There was the twelfth Ecumenical Council, Lateran IV (1215 A.D.), which visited a number of disabilities on all Jews, including enjoining them from appearing in public during Eastertime, barring them from holding public office, and declaring a moratorium on crusaders’ debts to Jews. Father Edward Flannery, in his pioneer history of Christian antisemitism, remarks: Thus far, there was nothing new in these enactments, which merely extended to the universal Church what earlier centuries had applied more locally. The unique and most extraordinary measure taken by the Council was the prescription of a distinc
  • 59. tive dress for Jews and Saracens. (At a later date, heretics, prostitutes, and lepers were included.) Raul Hilberg in his The Destruction of the European Jews (New York, 1961), pp. 5f., lists twenty-two conciliar or synodal decrees which were severely restrictive of Jews (from the fourth to the fifteenth centuries) and were paralleled by specific Nazi decrees. He states that the list of Church measures was taken in its entirety from J.E. Scherer, Die Rechtsverhältnisse der Juden in den deutsch-österreichischen Länder (Leipzig, 1901), pp. 39- 49. The list is as follows (only the first date of each measure is listed): 1) Prohibition of intermarriage and of sexual intercourse between Christians and Jews, Synod of Elvira, 306, C.E. 2) Jews and Christians not permitted to eat together, Synod of Elvira. 3) Jews not allowed to hold public office, Synod of Clermont, 535 C.E. 4) Jews not allowed to employ Christian servants or possess Christian slaves, 3rd Synod of Orleans. 5) Jews not permitted to show themselves in the streets during Passion Week, 3rd Synod of Orleans. 6) Burning of the Talmud and other books, 12th Synod of Toledo, 681 C.E. 7) Christians not permitted to patronize Jewish doctors, Trulanic Synod, 692 C.E. 8) Christians not permitted to live in Jewish homes, Synod of Narbonne, 1050 C.E.
  • 60. 9) Jews obliged to pay taxes for support of the Chruch to the same extent as Christians, Synod of Gerona, 1078 C.E. 10) Prohibition of Sunday work, Synod of Szabolcs, 1092 C.E. 11) Jews not permitted to be plaintiffs or witnesses against Christians in the courts, 3rd Lateran Council, 1179 C/E., Canon 26. 12) Jews not permitted to withhold inheritance from descendants who had accepted Christianity, 3rd Lateran Council, Canon 26. 13) The marking of Jewish clothes with a badge, 4th Lateran Council, 1215 C.E., Canon 68 (copied from the legislation by Caliph Omar II, 643-44 C.E., who had decreed that Christians wear blue belts and Jews yellow belts). 14) Construction of new synagogues prohibited, Council of Oxford, 1222 C.E. 15) Christians not permitted to attend Jewish ceremonies, Synod of Vienna, 1267 C.E. 16) Jews not permitted to dispute with simple Christian people about the tenets of the Catholic religion, Synod of Vienna. 17) Compulsory ghettos, Synod of Breslau, 1227 C.E. 18) Christians not permitted to sell or rent real estate to Jews, Synod of Ofen, 1279 C.E. 19) Adoption by a Christian of the Jewish religion or return by a baptized Jew to the Jewish religion defined as heresy, Synod of Mainz, 1310 C.E.
  • 61. 20) Sale or transfer of Church articles to Jews prohibited, Synod of Lavour, 1368 C.E. 21) Jews not permitted to act as agents in the conclusion of contracts between Christians, especially marriage contracts, Council of Basel, 1432, Sessio XIX. 22) Jews not permitted to obtain academic degrees, Council of Basel, Sessio XIX. Then there are the scourging words of the father of the Protestant Reformation, Martin Luther, who shortly before his death wrote a violent diatribe entitled AbouttheJewsandTheirLies, in which among other things he wrote that Jews “are thirsty bloodhounds and murderers of all Christendom, with full intent ...they had poisoned water and wells, stolen children and hacked them apart, in order to cool their temper secretly with Christian blood. His conclusion was that their synagogues should be burned and their books seized, that they should be forced to work with their hands, or better still, be expelled by the princes.7 They should be forced to hardest labor as handymen of serfs only; they should not be permitted to hold services; every Christian should be admonished to deal with them in a merciless manner; if you suffer, strike them on the jaw; if I had the power, I would assemble them to prove to us that we Christians do not worship God, under penalty of having their tongues cut out through the backs of their necks. Is it any wonder that Christians with this long heritage of hatred allowed and even abetted the cataclysmic horrors of the Holocaust, with its choking of the air with the smoke and ash of incinerated living Jewish children? Presumably no readers of this book share a direct responsibility for that Teutonic terror,
  • 62. but-and here let me shift to the first person-all of us Christians share gladly in the Christian heritage that made it possible. We cannot claim only the good of that heritage and make believe that the evil is not also there. That Christian heritage is now our heritage, and therefore our responsibility. There is no way that we can exorcize the demon of anti-Semitism from its past, present and future unless we first become aware of it. We must study it and face it honestly, and then our first response must be repentance. We cannot undo the overwhelming injustices of the past, but we can and we must acknowledge and repudiate them. Then we must go on to make whatever recompense we can in an attempt to redress the imbalance of justice between Christian and Jew-inadequate though this attempt must of necessity be. Moreover, we must not expect the Jews immediately to embrace us, forgiving and forgetting. We Christians have had a two- millennia-long history of tricking and betraying Jews. They are understandably suspicious about our motives and sincerity. We must be patient and prove ourselves not only with words but also with many deeds. Then perhaps they will turn to us in a dialogue in which there is no hidden Christian agenda of conversion. We will then meet as equal partners, parcumpari, each coming to learn from the other. Book available online: http://global-dialogue.com/swidlerbooks. ANTI-SEMITISM IN CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY (Hegel’s Philosophy of World Religions) Mainstream Christianity has often built a binary opposition between Christian values and the values of other religions. In so doing it follows a worldview largely prevalent in European intellectual heritage. Hegel captured well this “invention of otherness” in his philosophy of world history and in his demonstration of the superiority of Christianity over Judaism.
  • 63. Hegel’s philosophy of world history and his reflection on the rationality of Christianity have had a tremendous impact in Christian theology, and especially on missionary theology which shaped the perception of non-Europeans in the world in a decisive way up to this day. Hegel’s exclusion of Africa from history and humanity itself was not only a simple matter of bigotry, but rather an outcome of his rigorous philosophical thinking and his theological conception of Christianity. Well before his statements on Africa, Hegel had applied his philosophy to Judaism. While the anti-semitism of Martin Heidegger is now a matter of common knowledge and gave way to various publications, Hegel’s anti-semitism has been investigated rather modestly. I will limit myself here to a recent publication by John D. Caputo who made an enlightening comment on the “fears and tears” of Jacques Derrida with regard to what he terms “the terrorism of Hegelianism.” Meditating on Hegel’s philosophy of religion, Jacques Derrida worried over what becomes of the Jew once Christianity is said to be a representation of the absolute truth. Similarly the main question is “what becomes of the African” once Christianity is said to be the embodiment not only of the absolute truth and revelation but also of goodness and reason. It will become clear that Hegel’s logic which excluded the Jew from the world of true religion, beauty, freedom and goodness was applied to Africa with the same tragic conclusions. It is worth noting that Hegel supplied a veritable encyclopedia of Christian Europe and a logic of European Christianity, and taking inspiration from Christian theology, he organized his
  • 64. theory around the notion of LOVE. He identified Christianity and love first with the European spirit and secondly with philosophy, itself seen as a proprium of the European mind. For him the truth of Christianity is philosophy and no ontology is possible before the Gospel or outside it. Hegel articulated the most ambitious philosophy of the superiority of Christianity over all other religions and represents the culmination of Western Christianity to put as much metaphysical and theological distance as possible between Christianity and the Jews by attaching attach Christianity as closely as possible to a Greco-European spirit and by detaching it from the Jew, the tendency to view Christianity as spiritually Greek, not Jewish. In Hegel, the history of Christian Europe and the figure of the European Christianity take the form of a philosophy of history and of the Spirit, that is of philosophy itself, an onto- theologization of the Christian spirit of which the Jew is a negative moment. In the history of Christian philosophy, Hegel represents the final triumph of Christian querelle with world religions, initiated by that old dispute between Paul and Peter. Hegel embraced the winner Paul, the Jewish roman citizen, against Peter, the symbol of the legalism of Jerusalem, and articulated his philosophy of religion on Paul’s notion of Pleroma oun nomon he agape (the love which outdoes and perfects the law). Paul’s opposition between Jewish law and Christian Love offers Hegel a ground for the articulation of a philosophy of history which disqualifies not only Jewish religion but also Jewish history and Jewish people. When it comes to Jews, Hegel does not take any prisoners. As Jacques Derrida pointed out in a careful analysis of Hegel’s philosophy, Hegel painted a very hateful portrait of the Jew as a result of his own understanding of the nature and logic of Christianity as a representation of the absolute truth. Hegel accomplished this on both grounds of theological and philosophical arguments. Following Paul’s notion of Christian love, Hegel undertook a powerful attack upon the Jews, and
  • 65. this, in the very name of love, a hateful defense of the religion of love over and against the hatefulness of the Jews. Hegel used very skillfully that old strategy of Christian polemics: love as weapon against Jewish religion. As Caputo pointed out Love has been Christian’s most cunning and most effective weapon against non-Christian religions. Hegel used it ruthlessly and even brilliantly as the point of departure of his thought and as his first model of the Aufhebung. Using Paul’s notion of the pleroma of love, Hegel like Paul put Jewish law in its place and in so doing he also put the Jewish people in their place, that is in no place, for by making Christian love and Christianity itself the logic of history, of freedom, of the Spirit, Hegel made the Jew historically, philosophically, and theologically a figure of unfreedom and alienation. Stuck in the mud of ritual and literalism, and in the blood of the mohel, the Jew, according to Hegel, understands only the language of force and violence, not the language of love, and politically he becomes a figure of perdition, guilty of the perfidious execution of the Man of Love who came to liberate humankind from alienation. For Hegel, the Jew not only clings to a religion historically dead, replaced by Christianity, and to an old Mosaic law replaced by love but constitutes a philosophical type, the very figure of alienation from love. The Jew is stone cold and heartless, an Abrahamic figure capable of killing whatever he loves, and a legalist and Pharisee, possessing only the outer shell of ethical life. Hegel skillfully turns Jewish monotheism into a caricature. According to him, the Jew despises idols because he is incapable of appreciating the sensuous embodiment of the infinite. And because he is incapable of giving sensible form to the supersensible, of letting the infinite shine with beauty in finite figures, the Jew is incapable of appreciating beauty, for beauty is the way the invisible makes itself visible, palpable, felt. Being incapable to see the infinite in the finite world, the Jew is incapable of meditation for he is ignorant of incarnation. For Hegel, Jesus, the man of freedom as opposed to the spirit of the law, was the becoming un-Jewish of the Spirit, for law is for
  • 66. children not for the grown up. Such is the prototype, the type and the stereotype of Hegel’s metaphysics. The most interesting thing is that Hegel’s anti-Semitism is expressed in a sophisticated philosophical and theological reasoning. The Hegelian metaphysics and rhetoric deconstructs the Jew as the anti-phenomenological thing that the Spirit expels and vomits in its triumphant march toward fulfillment. In Hegel’s system, the Jew stands as everything that the Spirit casts out as un- beautiful, un-reconciled, un-historical, un-harmonized, un-true, or un-phenomenalizable, that is the phenomenological figure, the Gestaltung of a divided, ugly spirit. For Hegel, the Jewishness of Jesus is something for the Spirit to surpass. The empirical actuality of Jesus had to break up, in order to allow the Spirit to flow and leave Jesus behind, letting Christianity become itself, become Greek, beyond Jesus while letting the circumcised bury the circumcised.. Finally Hegel turns the Torah against the Jew and uses it as evidence that the Jew is ignorant of the concept of Human rights. He starts with a definition of law. Law, he says, is not truth, but a command, not the manifestation of the infinite in the finite, but a distant, empty and contentless imperative. Since Jewish society is governed by the Torah, there is no freedom in this world, no spirit, no true polis that embodies political reason, no political subjects with rights who recognize themselves in the whole, but only violence, imperative, the rule of the master over the slave. This, in Hegel’s view, is the difference between Moses and Solon, between the Mosaic law and the democratic laws of Athens. Jewish life is an economy of expropriation, where ownership is cut off and everything is on loan, a system devoid of civil rights and family property and laws of inheritance, which are canceled in the year of the jubilee. One may argue that once Hegel has presented the Jew as the enemy of Human rights, the elimination of the Jew comes as a necessary step for the protection of Human rights in the
  • 67. world. As this analyzis shows, Hegel used a fourfold approach: - a) absolutization of Christianity as the only religion of truth, love and reason; - b) the identification of the Christian spirit with European civilization; - c) the exclusion of non-European cultures from the realm of philosophy, true religion and civilization; - d) the “elimination of the brute” as a way of saving civilization. It is exactly this same reasoning that has often been applied to non-Christian people. These people have been defined in mainstream scholarship as the exact opposite of reason, law, morality, and indeed the very antithesis of genuine humanity. Moreover Hegel’s way of thinking about non European people is consonant with the development of Christian theology in its perception of the pagans and savages. Christian theology understands God as a God of history, a God who intervenes in human history, a God who guides the events of world history. This notion is critical to the understanding of Hegel’s vision of world history and the role he assigns to Africa in that history, a role which seems to be the will of God according to the inner logic of Hegel’s thinking. Major reference: Caputo, John D., The Prayers and Tears of Jacques Derrida: Religion without Religion. (Bloomington: Indiana, University Press, 1997); p.246 Anti-Semitism in Biblical Studies: the “Kittel scandal” and the Hegelian Paradigm
  • 68. Once Hegel has presented the Jew as the enemy of the religion of Love, the elimination of the Jew comes as a necessary step for the promotion of love in the world. But to better grasp what I mean here by Hegelian paradigm in Christian theology I shall turn to the case of Gerhard Kittel, an eminent figure in biblical studies. The role played by Christian ways of theologizing in the rise of anti-Semitism, from Church fathers to Martin Luther has been object of extended studies. I shall limit myself here to a recent prominent case which is enlightening because of the intellectual qualities of the scholar and his work, and also because of his connection with one of the most extreme ideologies of human rights violation, i.e. Nazism. The case of Gerhard Kittel (1888- 1948) here is worth mentioning in order to grasp the impact of some theological ways of thinking on anti-Semitism and, subsequently, the role played by Christian theologies in the promotion not only of colonialism, but also in the creation of the idea of a primitive, cursed and evil Africa.The Kittel scandal is particularly interesting because it concerns the sacred texts which are the source of Christian theology. Gerhard Kittel is an eminent German Evangelical New Testament scholar who stands as a monument in contemporary development of biblical studies. At the same time Kittel entered into world history as a “leading theologian under Hitler.” This expression coined by Robert Ericksen refers to the fact that Kittel became the eminent symbol of the anti-Semitic dimension of Christian theology. His anti-Semitism was so blatant that in 1945, at the close of the second world war, he was arrested at his home in Tübingen by French police for his Nazi membership and his active role in suspect organizations. He was then
  • 69. relieved of his scholarly and academic responsibilities and imprisoned. The eminent Christian biblical scholar William Fox Albright declared that Kittel “became the mouthpiece of the most vicious Nazi anti-Semitism, sharing with Emanuel Hirsch of Göttingen the grim distinction of making extermination of the Jews theologically respectable.” Although many Christian theologians struggled ambiguously with the Jewish question, Kittel, as Albright observed took the position to its extreme conclusion: In view of the terrible viciousness of his attacks on Judaism and the Jews, which continued at least until 1943, Gerhard Kittel must bear the guilt of having contributed more, perhaps, than any other Christian theologian to the mass murder of Jews by the Nazis. Kittel did not limit himself to pure scholastic pursuit of knowledge. He clearly considered three options for dealing with German Jews: extermination, deportation to Palestine, and assimilation, and analyzed which option was more efficient. Examining the case of extermination, he argued that Extirpation of Jewry by violence is not worthy of serious discussion: if the systems of the Spanish Inquisition or the Russian pogroms did not manage it, it will certainly be impossible to achieve in the twentieth century. There is no inner sense in this idea either. A historical state of affairs, as exemplified by this people, can be resolved by the extirpation of the people only in demagogical slogans but never in history itself. The sense of a historical situation always consists in that it sets us a task we have to master. To kill all Jews does not mean, however, to master the situation. Kittel, who as a good historian, understood the impossibility of these three options rejected them on a pragmatic ground and proposed a system of “apartheid.” He argued that Jews be
  • 70. stripped of their German citizenship and be given the status of guests, and that they live separately from Germany’s Christians. In other words, he argued for the abolition of the emancipation act which had led to the integration of Jews in the German society and the return of Jews to the situation of pre- Enlightenment ghettos. All that for the benefit of the German nation. The most important point here is not Kittel’s life and choices, but the theological logic he brought to biblical studies. As Max Weinreich pointed out in his book on Hitler’s professors (1946), Kittel not only was a Nazi through and through but also he played a crucial role in the rise of a Anti-Jewish science, thus contributing to legitimizing Nazi anti-Semitism and making it academically and religiously respectable. According to Alan Rosen, Kittel was one of the leading scholars in a Nazi research institute and gave lectures and published articles and books that provided a Christian, religious basis for the policies decreed by the Nazi government. Hence, the scholarship he pursued in biblical studies not only refrained from challenging the status quo but rather worked within and benefited from Nazi institutions. He split his scholarly work during the second world war between Tübingen and the University of Vienna, publishing much of his wartime research under the auspices of the Reichsinstitut für Geschichte des Neuen Deutschlands (Institute for the History of the New Germany). This institute emphasized a study of history based on the category of race, and enjoyed close and amiable relations to the upper echelon of Nazi officials. All this had to do with his understanding of world history and the nature of Christianity, and understanding which found its way in his famous work, the nine-volume Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (Theologisches Wörterbuch zum Neuen Testament). This dictionary enjoys in both Protestant and Catholic Theology such a reputation that it continues to be regarded as a foundational tool for students of
  • 71. biblical texts the world over. And yet this highly scholarly work grew out of a tainted theological atmosphere. It should be noted that Kittel was a man deeply rooted in Christian tradition. His own father Rudolf Kittel was an eminent specialist of the Old Testament, and Gerhard Kittel began his research with an amazing openness to Judaism. According to Alan Rosen, in the 1920s, his work was exceptionally generous to Judaism, in contrast with other Christian scholars of his time. While under the influence of Adolf von Harnack’s The Essence of Christianity, many scholars favored the notion that Christianity drew its inspiration and substance primarily from its Greco- Roman milieu, Kittel, who had become expert in the relationship between the New Testament and the rabbinic literature operated a revolution by emphasizing the Jewish roots of Christianity. Opting for a position which was not popular during his era and bucking the then dominant trend, he argued in his Jesus und die Rubbinen (1914) that most of Jesus’ teaching has its parallel in the Talmud thus challenging what others saw as the distinctive character of Christianity. But Kittel’s discovery was also the beginning of his trouble. Confronted as a Christian with the question of the specificity and uniqueness of Christianity, Kittel moved into a direction which was to lead him to anti-Semitism. Starting with the premise that the distinctive character of Christianity layed not in its teachings, which it shared with Judaism, but rather with the divinity of Jesus, which Judaism had rejected, Kittel turned the notion of rejection into a dominant theological theme. The rejection of Judaism became an indispensable way of affirming the validity of Christianity. And finally the rejection of Judaism as a religion lead to the rejection of the people who reject Jesus, that is to the extermination of the Jews. In 1933, allying the word and the world, Kittel who was the professor of New Testament at the University of Tübingen, joined the Nazi pary and welcomed National Socialism as “a renewal movement based on a Christian moral foundation” and
  • 72. regarded this Nazi Parti as an antidote to the decadence and immorality of the Weimar republic. But the most important point here is his use of biblical scholarship to justify the persecution of Jews. In 1933, on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of the German Student Union in Tübingen, he delivered a public lecture on Die Judenfrage (“The Jewish Question”), in which he defended Hitler’s anti-Semitic legislation, on the ground, among other things, that the Scripture themselves teach the rejection of the Jews because “by rejecting Christ the Jews had themselves incurred rejection.” Kittel who started his research with the appreciation of rabbinic influences on Christianity moved progressively in the opposite direction. The need to define the uniqueness of Christianity will lead him and his team to the need for the “purification of Christianity from Jewish influences” and more concretely to the problematic movement of the “Dejudification” of the Christianity and the German Church so well promoted by the Institut zur Erforschung des jüdischen Einflusses auf das deutsche kirchliche Leben (The Institute for Research on the Jewish Influence on German Church Life). With regard to the worldview of the Dictionary, Kittel who assumed its editorship from 1929 to 1945 authorized the publication of articles which were clearly anti-Semitic and gave voice to authors who were even more anti-Semitic than himself. This is for instance the case of Walter Grundmann and G. Bertram who contributed thirty-nine articles to the first four volumes and who embodied the problematic worldview of the Dictionary. Grundmann and Bertram were both members of the Institute for Research on the Jewish Influence on German Church Life whose goal was the Dejudification of the Christian Church and theology. Grundmann connected this “defense” of Christianity with the patriotic struggle for the protection of the Christian German nation. Such a protection required the conceptualization of the Jew as the enemy of both Christ and the German people. He made it clear that to achieve its goal of dejudification, the institute intended to lead a war against Jews and Judaism. In
  • 73. 1943 he explicitly wrote that “In the fateful battle of the Greater Germany which is a fateful battle against World Jewry and against all destructive and nihilistic forces, the work of the institute gives the tools for the overthrow of all religious foreignness... and serves the belief of the Reich. clearly wrote that the goal of the institute.” The scholarly task of dejudification led by this institute comprised the radical separation of the New Testament and the Old Testament and the attempt to demonstrate that Jesus was not a Jew. In the article “Megas” (Greatness) he published in the Dictionary, Grundmann articulated a reflection reminiscent of Hegel. In his need to explain the uniqueness of the Gospel’s message he built a binary opposition by contrasting Jesus and the Scribes. After noting that while the teaching of Jesus is the greatest commandment of love, the scribes focus on the law, he concludes that this difference carries with it “the radical overthrow of Jewish nomism and in some sense of Judaism itself as a religion.” It would be simplistic to regard Kittel as a vulgar anti-Semite. His understanding of the biblical view of the Jews was part of a long tradition of Christian theology. As Kittel’s collusion with Nazism shows, Christian theology of the “fulfillment of the mosaic law by Jesus” leads to anti-Semitism. What happened with regard to Jews, women, native Americans and many other so-called “savage pagans” happened also to Africans. Although Kittel and his colleagues had other reasons for their anti- Semitism, what is interesting for African studies is the inner logic of biblical studies, specifically the notion of the fulfillment of the Mosaic law which stands at the core of New Testament scholarship and its notion of the uniqueness of Christianity. Kittel and his team sensed the need for the “purification” of Christianity from Judaism. In Africa the battle was waged against traditional religion and ways of worship. To