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Christians
and Jews
From a brochure of the same title, produced and
distributed by the Office of Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations,
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), 100 Witherspoon St., Louisville, KY
40202-1396.
Christians and Jews live side by side in our American
society. We engage one another not only in personal and social ways
but also at deeper levels where ultimate values are expressed.
Both the increasingly pluralistic character of our
U.S. society and historical events of the twentieth century -- including
the Holocaust and the establishment of the State of Israel -- have
posed challenges to the theological assumptions of the American
churches as they relate to Jews.
The 199th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.) (1987) adopted "A Theological Understanding of the
Relationship between Christians and Jews" for study and reflection.
Its affirmations propose a foundation for Christian relationships
with Jews:
2. The church's identity is intimately related
to the continuing identity of the Jewish people.
3. We are willing to ponder with Jews the mystery
of God's election of both Jews and Christians to be a light to
the nations.
4. As Christians we acknowledge that Jews are
in covenant relationship with God, and we consider the implications
of this reality for evangelism and witness.
5. As Christians we acknowledge in repentance
the church's complicity in proliferation of anti-Jewish attitudes
and actions, and we determine to put an end to the teaching of
contempt for Jews.
6. We are willing to investigate the continuing
significance of the promise of "land," with its associated
obligations, and to explore the implications for Christian theology.
7. We act in hope, which we share with Jews, as
we both await the final manifestation of God's promise of the
peaceable kingdom.
Presbyterians have identified underlying questions
that require continuing reflection by Christians. Our response should
be made in humility and with a deep respect for others' human integrity
and spiritual values.
- What are our understandings of Jesus in a religiously
plural world?
- What is the appropriate biblical material to
guide reflection about Christians and Jews?
- What are the appropriate content and forms of
evangelism among people of other faiths?
Dialogue is the appropriate form of faithful conversation
between Christians and Jews. As trust is established, not only questions
and concerns can be shared but faith and commitments as well. Christians
have no reason to be reluctant in sharing the good news of their
faith with anyone. A militancy that seeks to impose one's own point
of view on another, however, is not only inappropriate but counterproductive.
In dialogue, partners are able to define their faith in their own
terms, avoiding caricatures of one another. They are thus better
able to obey the commandment, "You shall not bear false witness
against your neighbor." It is out of a mutual willingness to
listen and to learn that faith deepens and a new and better relationship
between Christians and Jews is enabled to grow.
Christians are challenged to review and change attitudes
that belittle Jews or fan hatred. We can become aware of those uses
of Judaism in preaching and teaching that make it a negative example
in order to commend Christianity. We can avoid repetition of stereotypes
or nonhistorical ideas about Pharisees and Jewish leadership.
Christians and Jews are each called to the service
of God in the world, and Christian witness includes commitment,
with others, to human solidarity against injustice and for the unity
and integrity of creation.
Both peoples are sensitive to the dimension of the
holy. Jews and Christians can cooperate in providing liturgical
and theological resources on issues.
Support the search to promote understanding.
- Initiate opportunities to hear the self-understanding
of Jews.
- Engage in dialogue with Jewish partners.
- Participate in educational programs designed
to foster understanding and better relationships.
- Plan congregational education for Christians
and Jews together. Discover activities for all age groups.
- Study materials that explore theological and
biblical understandings. Be aware of roots of anti-Semitism
that have often come from distortions of Christian faith.
- Seek historical information about past relationships
between Christians and Jews.
Support the search for cooperation.
- Teach that authentic Christianity can have no
complicity in anti-Semitic attitudes or actions. Work to oppose
persecution or denigration of Jews.
- Develop with Jews common opportunities for service
and mission to meet human needs and address societal issues of
peace and justice.
- Determine appropriate responses to Yom Hashoah,
the Holocaust Remembrance Day listed in the Presbyterian calendar.
- Seek common ethical grounds in the Abrahamic
faith traditions that enable solidarity on behalf of justice and
peace.
- Engage in dialogue with Jewish groups about the
State of Israel. Encourage work for reconciliation in the Middle
East in as broad a way as possible. Facilitate constructive dialogue
and common efforts between Jews, Christians, and Muslims.
- Pray for and encourage those who would break
cycles of vengeance and violence, whether of states or resistance
movements, of terror or retaliation.
Support the search for faithful witness.
- Participate in common celebration, prayer, and
worship with Jews.
- Respond to pastoral needs arising out of the
interaction of Jews and Christians in U.S. society.
- Testify by deeds and words to the all-encompassing
love of Christ through whom we "who were far off have been
brought near" to the covenants of promise.
- Cooperate with other churches to seek the visible
Christian unity that makes credible our witness in a pluralistic
world.
See General Assembly actions on which this content
is based: Christian-Jewish 1987, 1989; Anti-Semitism 1990; Middle
East yearly. See also Christian Identity, 1987.
Resources
Efroymson, David P., et al. Within
Context: Essays on Jews and Judaism in the New Testament. Liturgical
Press, 1993.
Kraus, Hans-Joachim. Israel in the
Theology of Calvin. PC(USA) Office of Ecumenical and Interfaith
Relations. 1991. Order from office.
Limburg, James. Judaism: An Introduction
for Christians. Augsburg Press, 1987.
National Council of Churches. Christians
and the Holocaust. 1993. Order from NCC Office of Interfaith
Relations, 475 Riverside Dr., New York, NY 10115.
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). A
Theological Understanding of the Relationship Between Christians
and Jews. 199th General Assembly (1987). Study guide and bibliography.
OGA#88-071.
Shermis, Michael and Arthur Zannoni,
eds. Introduction to Jewish-Christian Relations. Paulist
Press, 1991.
Thinking and Working Together:
Study and Action Suggestions for Jewish and Christian Congregations.
Prepared by PC(USA), Union of American Hebrew Congregations,
National Council of Churches. 1993. PDS#243-93-037.
World Council of Churches. Ecumenical
Considerations on Jewish-Christian Dialogue. 1982. Copy available
from Office of Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations.
"Through
dialogue with Jews many Christians have come to appreciate the richness
and vitality of Jewish faith and life in the covenant and have been
enriched in their own understandings of God and the divine will
for all creatures."
"Bible-reading
and worshiping Christians often believe that they 'know Judaism.'...This
attitude is often enforced by lack of knowledge about the history
of Jewish life and thought through the 1,900 years since the parting
of the ways of Judaism and Christianity."
"In
the process of defining its own identity the church defined Judaism,
and assigned to the Jews definite roles in its understanding of
God's acts of salvation. It should not be surprising that Jews resent
those Christian theologies in which they as a people are assigned
to play a negative role. Tragically, such patterns of thought in
Christianity have often led to overt acts of condescension, persecution,
and worse."
World Council of Churches, Ecumenical Considerations
on Jewish-Christian Dialogue, 1982
Information was provided
by the PC(USA) Ecumenical and Interfaith Office, and has been reprinted
with permission. For additional information, please go to
www.pcusa.org/wmd/eir
.
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