Jewish-Christian Relations 1989 - 1993:
A Bibliographic Update
by Eugene J. Fisher
CONTENTS
Documenting the Dialogue
Introductions and General Overviews
Biblical Studies: Jewish and Christian
The New Testament and Judaism
Jews and Christians in History
Liturgy and Spirituality
The Shoah and Jewish-Christian
Relations
Politics and Polemics
Toward a Theological Encounter
Israel,
Liberation Theology and Jewish-Christian-Muslim Trilateral Dialogue
Introductory Materials
Jerusalem
This review-essay is intended to update a rather extensive annotated bibliography I put
together for the volume I did with Rabbi Leon Klenicki of the Anti-Defamation League to mark
the 25th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council's declaration, Nostra Aetate. Titled
In Our Time; The Flowering of the Jewish-Catholic Dialogue (Mahwah, NJ:: Paulist
Press, Stimulus Books, 1C99O, pp. 105-161), the volume contained key Catholic documents
since the Council along with the commentaries by Klenicki and myself and is, in my entirely
subjective opinion, a good beginning point on the issues of the dialogue for readers of this
Journal.
The present bibliography will follow, in general, the topical outline developed for my
1989 review of the literature, with some modification reflecting more recent trends and
emphases. With a few exceptions, I will not repeat works noted then, although some here
presented were published during or before 1989.
Documenting the Dialogue
In speaking with Jewish groups I have noticed over the years that while the statement of
the Second Vatican Council is well known, other official Catholic and Protestant statements
that have been put out since then are not so well-known. This tends to leave a general
impression in the Jewish community that the Churches have failed to follow up on the initial
breakthrough and have not made a serious effort to "reach the grass roots" with
their renewed Christian teaching. I would argue, however, that the now numerous
international and national statements of Christian churches since the Council represent a
very significant development in understanding on official levels that will indeed have a
profound influence throughout Christian life on all levels in the Years to come. (The reader
should note that this is my "half full glass" argument. I am of the school that
continues, after studying past Jewish-Christian relations, to be astounded that there is any
liquid in the glass at all. Many of my co-workers in the vineyard of dialogue will,
rightfully, point to the half emptiness of the same glass.)
What Leon Klenicki and I tried to do for official Catholic documents, Protestant scholars
Allan Brockway, Paul van Buren, Rolf Rendtorff and Simon Schoon have accomplished for
Protestant texts in The Theology of the Churches and the Jewish People: Statements of the
World Council of Churches and Its Member Churches (Geneva: WCC Publications, 1988).
Along with a surprisingly firm consensus striving to acknowledge the ongoing validity of the
faith of the Jewish people on its own terms (rather than as a mere propadeutic to Christian
faith), the more subtle differences in point of view among the twenty World Council and
Protestant denominational statements, and those among the commentators themselves, are
interesting to note. The internal pluralism of the Christian community, and the creativity
consequent upon that pluralism, may surprise some readers of this Journal who may
think of Christianity as rather "monolithic" in its attitudes toward Jews and
Judaism.
More specifically, Harold Ditmanson has edited Stepping Stones to Further
Jewish-Lutheran Relationships: Key Lutheran Statements (Minneapolis: Augsburg/Fortress,
1990), which includes seven documents with comments by himself, Leon Klenicki, E. Gritsch
and J. Wallman. The title pays homage, of course, to Helga Croner's two volumes of Stepping
Stones to Further Jewish-Christian Relations (Paulist/Stimulus), which carried
Protestant and Catholic documentation up to 1985.
Anyone interested in the history (and therefore the meaning) of the Second Vatican
Council's Declaration and subsequent documents of the Holy See on the subject will be
delighted to know of the availability in English of two significant recent volumes. The
first is Stjepan Schmidt's massive study, Augustin Bea, Cardinal of Unity (New York:
New Ciq Press, 1992). Bea, a German Jesuit biblical scholar who was a protege of Pius XII,
was given the resposibility by Pope John XXIII of drafting a document on the Jews for the
consideration of the world's bishops. Schmidt narrates the famous meeting with Jules Isaac
and devotes a fascinating chapter to the intrigue and drama surrounding the Council
deliberations. The second is Cardinal Johannes Willebrands' Church and Jewish People: New
Considerations (Paulist, 1992). Cardinal Willebrands worked with Bea during the Council
and succeeded him as President of the Holy See's Commission for Religious Relations with the
Jewish People. The volume includes 25 of his own writings plus eight key official documents
beginning in 1974, culminating in his addresses on "religious pluralism" to the
12th National Workshop on Christian-Jewish Relations in Chicago and on "The Shoah"
to the International Conference on the Holocaust, both in November of 1990. The significance
of these papers for a correct understanding of Church teaching on Jews and Judaism cannot be
over-stressed.
The best source that I know of for ongoing documentation and articles, usually issues
with a theme explored from both Jewish and Christian perspectives, is the journal SIDIC, put
out three times a year by the Sisters of Sion in Rome. It can be ordered through my office
(3211 Fourth Street, NE, Washington DC 200177). Also helpful for keeping up with trends and
major themes in the dialogue are the volumes of the annual lecture series of the Center for
Jewish-Christian Learning at the University of St. Thomas (2115 Summit Avenue, St. Paul MN
55105-1096).
Rabbi Leon Klenicki of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith (823 United Nations
Plaza, New York NY 10017) is beginning a new series of occasional papers, In Dialogue. The
first number included a handy overview of Christian traditions by Msgr. Michael Carroll of
Philadelphia and Klenicki on "Historical and Spiritual Healing" between Jews and
Christians. The next number will have articles on education by myself and Fr. Remi Hoeckman,
O.P., who has recently taken over as Secretary for the Holy See's Commission for Religious
Relations with the Jews, and reports on the important 1992 updates of Christian textbook
studies for their treatment of Jews and Judaism.
The original "self-studies" were undertaken by Protestant, Catholic and Jewish
scholars at the initiative of the American Jewish Committee in the late 1950s. My own Faith
Without Prejudice (New York: Crossroad, 1993) updated the Catholic analysis to register
the dramatic improvement in treatment brought about by the Second Vatican Council. Now,
Philip Cunningham has done the same in a dissertation for Boston College with the Catholic
elementary and secondary educational materials of the 1990s. Once again he reports, Catholic
texts are significantly improved over the situation that prevailed in the mid-1970s. Indeed,
the series that scored the worst in my study is virtually exemplary today. Stuart Polly's
dissertation on Protestant texts for Jewish Theological Seminary reveals a somewhat more
mixed picture, which is not surprising given the range from mainstream to evangelical
conservative materials that he studied. Indeed, the entire range, intriguingly, is present
among the Lutherans alone, with the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) scoring as
high as the Catholic studies and the Missouri Synod among the lowest.
For those interested in local-level possibilities and parish-synagogue program ideas, The
National Dialogue Newsletter (POB 849, Stamford CT 06904) is a must. Founded by the late
Frank Brennan, of blessed memory, it has initiated some very interesting exchanges such as
the responses to Michael S. Kogan's "Toward Total Dialogue" recently put together
into a special issue. Other newsletter-style publications worth noting are: Interreligious
Currents (UAHC, 838 5th Avenue, New York City NY 10021-7064) edited by Rabbi Gary
Bretton-Granatoor; Lights on Interfaith Relations edited by Rev. Jay T. Rock for the
National Council of Churches (475 Riverside Drive, Room 870, New York City, NY 10115); and
Prof. James H. Charlesworth's Explorations: Rethinking Relationships Among Jews and
Christians (American Interfaith Institute, 401 North Broad Street, Philadelphia PA
19108).
For lack of a better category, I will include here Albert Vorspan's Start Worrying:
Details to Follow (New York: UAHC Press, 1991). While most of the book is, as the author
states, an "insider's look" at Jewish life, one chapter is dialogically pertinent,
"The Pope is Coming, The Pope is Coming." As a staff person on the other side of
the discussions Vorspan narrates with such humor, I can attest to the accuracy of his
depiction. I can even tell you the names of most of the players.
Introductions and General Overviews
This is a new category that previously had been included with documentation. The need to
split the category reflects, I believe, that the dialogue is reaching a period of
consolidation and practical implementation.
A volume well-suited to the undergraduate classroom as well as ongoing teacher education
and adult dialogue groups is Michael Shermis and Arthur Zannoni's Introduction to
Jewish-Christian Relations (Paulist, 1991) which includes essays on the Hebrew
Scriptures by Zannoni, the New Testament by Michael Cook, the Holocaust by Michael McGarry,
Israel by Robert Everett, Antisemitism by Christine Athans, Religious Pluralism by Philip
Culbertson, Jesus and the Pharisees by John Pawlikowski, Intermarriage by Sanford Seltzer,
Feminism by Susannah Heschel, and Education by S. Samuel Shermis.
Jews and Christians: A Troubled Family (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1990)
represents an extended dialogue between a major Protestant theologian and Biblical scholar,
Walter J. Harrelson, and a widely respected Jewish leader, Rabbi Randall M. Falk of
Congregation Ohavai Shalom in Nashville. A Jewish and Christian "outlook" is
provided for eight topics: The Other, Historical Perspectives, Scriptures, God Concepts,
Jesus, Antisemitism and the Holocaust, the State of Israel, and Covenant and Mission. The
presentations, designed for a course jointly taught by the authors at the Divinity School of
Vanderbilt University, include suggested reading lists and provide a thoughtful basic
introduction to the dialogue.
The next volume brings us from the Protestant American South to the Church of England. In
Time to Meet: Towards a Deeper Relationship between Jews and Christians (London: SCM
Press and Philadelphia: Trinity Press International, 1990) Rev. Marcus Braybrooke, Vicar of
Christ Church, Bath, and former director of the Council of Christians and Jews, first
summarizes the statements of the Churches, Catholic and Protestant. In this, he seeks to
draw out the level of consensus that exists among various statements and also the
"unanswered theological challenge" still awaiting official Christian response.
Part Two, "Explorations," takes up such challenges as "the Jewish
Jesus," Christology, Covenant(s), God and Jesus, "Dialogue or Mission?," Shoah,
Israel, and "Together to Pray."
Braybrooke's approach is well-informed and irenic. I recommend this book highly, although
on some points I would personally take a different tack. While eminently fair-minded, for
example, he is a bit tortured on the issue of "forgiveness," by which he means
primarily Jewish forgiveness of Christians for the latter's many violent sins against Jews
over the centuries culminating in the Holocaust. He wants to argue, if I read him correctly,
that the Christian doctrine of forgiveness is different and that the Jews could learn from
this and, by forgiving, begin to heal. It is not so much that I disagree with Braybrooke's
theology. He is correct in his understanding of Christian doctrine, of course. But I
disagree with the way the issue is joined in this book (and elsewhere among Christians). For
me, the issue is not "Why don't Jews forgive?" but "Have Christians
repented?" For Christians no less than for Jews the former is dependent, in God's
grace, on the latter. The situation that precipitated the discussion upon which Braybrooke
reflects, after all, was the "reconciliation" ceremony at the Bitburg cemetery
between American President Ronald Reagan and German Chancellor Helmut Kohl. In this
carefully staged encounter two Christian leaders came together in a Nazi cemetery to forgive
each other for crimes committed primarily against Jews, hardly an adequate symbol of
Christian repentance that would in any reasonable fashion call for a Jewish response, much
less one of collective forgiveness such as Braybrooke appears to be seeking. No, I do not
think we Christians should look to the Jewish people to let us off the hook of our own sins,
and the consequent obligation, in Jesus' words, to "repent and sin no more"
against the Jewish people.
Where Braybrooke comments insightfully on the documents and topics of the contemporary
dialogue from the perspective of the Church of England, John Rousmaniere, writing in the
context of the American Episcopal Church, attempts an historical introduction in A Bridge
to Dialogue: The Story of Jewish-Christian Relations (Mahwah: Paulist, Stimulus 1991).
Starting with the first century and including as an appendix a brief survey of "Jewish
Foundations of Christian Worship," Rousmaniere provides a succinct popular- level
overview of the history of the relationship with its tragedies and misunderstandings, from a
Christian point of view. Together with the Braybrooke volume, Bridge to Dialogue will
provide Episcopalian parishes and seminaries with a solid set of textbooks for study and
discussion of the history and contemporary topics of the relationship.
In 1987, after a biblical seven years of intensive labor and discussion, the General
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA) adopted "for study and reflection" a
paper entitled, "A Theological Understanding of the Relationship Between Christians and
Jews." It compares favorably, needless to say, with other Christian documents in the
field. In 1989, the Ecumenical and Interfaith Office of the Global Mission Unit of the PC
(USA) issued a series of very helpful "occasional papers" exploring the
implications of the document by scholars such as H.J. Kraus, Bruce Robbins, and Judith
Herschcopf Banki. The General Assembly mandated further study materials in 1989, resulting
in a volume edited by Donald Dawe and Aurelia Fule for the Theology and Worship Ministry
Unit of PC (USA) entitled, Christians and Jews TogetherVoices from the Conversation (Louisville:
Presbyterian Publishing House, 1991). Again, a wide range of Presbyterian and other
Protestant scholarship is brought to bear on the subject, along with Jewish comments by
David Novak and Michael Wyschogrod. The energy and wide involvement within the Presbyterian
community illustrates a strength of Presbyterian polity in that it is able to involve so
much of the intellectual core and "grass roots" of its community through the very
process of developing and disseminating such a document. The Dawe/Fule volume contains handy
"study guides" for several discussion sessions. While I hold great admiration for
both the procedure and the high quality of the results, and would hold them up as models for
other Christian communities such as my own, I did communicate to Rev. Fule a serious concern
with the volume. This was the editorial decision to include, with no differing Jewish or
Christian viewpoints, a single essay on "Messianic Jews" which uncritically favors
a style of organized "witness" aimed at the Jewish community that many Christians
would question as inappropriate.
In the fall of 1990, Fordham University, run by the Jesuit Order in New York, began the
celebration of its sesquicentennial with a major symposium on Catholic-Jewish relations. The
resulting papers have been brought together in a special issue of the Fordham University
Quarterly, Thought: A Review of Culture and Idea (Vol. 67, No. 267, December 1992),
edited by Rev. Donald J. Moore, S.J., who also contributed a paper on Jewish Spirituality.
Authors include Elie Wiesel and John T. Pawlikowski, O.S.M., on Nostra Aetate; Celia
Deutsch, N.D.S., and Norman J. Cohen on the New Testament and the Parting of the Ways,
respectively, David Burrell, C.S.C., on the State of Israel and Rabbi A. James Rudin and
myself projecting our "dreams" for dialogue together into the 21st Century.
A lovely and insightful dialogue, actually the edited transcript of a four-hour
television conversation for NBC, can be found in Elie Wiesel and John Cardinal O'Connor, A
Journey of Faith (New York: Donald I. Fine, 1990). The two speak their personal memories
of their fathers and their reflections on topics ranging from antisemitism to Zionism,
picking up a number of contemporary controversies and hopes on the way.
A handy reference tool for beginnings in dialogue is found in Rabbi Dan Cohn-Sherbok's A
Dictionary of Judaism and Christianity (Philadelphia Trinity Press International, 1991),
with brief entries on topics and terms ranging from abortion and Abraham to Yom Tov and
Zionism. The work could have been improved by the active collaboration of a Christian
scholar. The treatment of "Catholicism" as K'lal Yisrael, with more weight
given to Anglican and Orthodox Christian objections to Roman Catholic claims than to
providing insight into Catholicism as a tradition in its own right, while interesting to
some, may not give the non-Catholic reader much understanding of her Catholic neighbors.
Also, the copy editor for the back cover got a little carried away when he or she claimed
that "This is the first dictionary to explain and compare the key concepts, beliefs and
practices of both Judaism and Christianity." That distinction should go to Leon
Klenicki and Geoffrey Wigoder for their A Dictionary of the Jewish-Christian Dialogue (Paulist/Stimulus,
1984), a project that did involve Christians giving their own perspectives on each of the
thirty-four terms included.
While the conversation among "mainline" Protestants, Catholics and Jews has
been moving along at a pace marked by official statements and dearly measurable progress,
readers of this Journal may also wish to know the status of the dialogue wity
torotestant Evangelicals. Pioneered by the late Rabbi Marc H. Tanenbaum along with his
American Jewish Committee colleague Rabbi A. James Rudin and Evangelical scholar Marvin R.
Wilson with conferences which resulted in two volumes of collected essays on Evangelicals
and Jews (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1978, 1984) and A Time to Speak: The
Evangelical-Jewish Encounter (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1987), the relationship has more
recently been chronicled by David A. Rausch, Professor of History and Jewish Studies at
Ashland University in Communities in Conflist: Evangelicals and Jews and Fundamentalist
Evangelicals and Anti-Semitism (Philadelphia: Trinity Press International, 1991 and
1993, respectively).
Biblical Studies: Jewish and
Christian
The history of critical literary and biblical scholarship has been in the main (with some
very notable exceptions) virtually coterminous with Protestant history in Europe and, more
recently, also in America. Given this fact, it is not surprising that anti-Catholic and
anti-Judaic polemics more than occasionally crept into biblical criticism. Wellhausen's
highly influential late 19th century text, for example, managed not so subtly to write off
both priests and Pharisees (and therefore Catholic and Jewish traditions) as obsolete,
moribund, and superseded by Protestant Christianity by applying Hegelian dialectics to
biblical history. Jews and Catholics, understandably, had difficulties feeling at home in
critical biblical studies and often tended to look askance at their own members who ventured
to enter into such studies.
Thankfully, the age of such polemicized approaches to sacred Scripture is now receding
behind us. Among the activities to celebrate the centenary of its founding in 1880, the
once-staunchly Protestant and now ecumenical Society of Biblical Literature commissioned a
series of Confessional Perspectives. Perhaps nothing other than our liturgies touches
the internal life of communities more than the methods and perspectives we bring to bear on
the interpretation of the Bible, since it is, in whatever canon, for all of us, our founding
and ultimately validating document. (The Muslims, I suspect, were not entirely wrong to call
both Jews and Christians "People of the Book" despite the huge differences between
us.)
Jews of a scholarly bent who wish to understand how Catholic tradition functions will be
interested in Gerald Fogarty's fascinating American Catholic Biblical Scholarship: A
History from the Early Republic to Vatican II (San Francisco: Harper and Row, 1989).
Similarly, Catholics will be interested in S. David Sperling's Students of the Covenant:
A History of Jewish Biblical Scholarship in North America (Atlanta: Scholars Press,
1992). Together, these volumes can form the basis for a very rich dialogue of shared
perspective among American Jews and Catholics in an area that I suspect will be surprising
to both.
In a now classic essay on "Tanakh and New Testament" in L. Boadt, et al.,
Biblical Studies: Meeting Ground of Jews and Christians (Paulist 1980), Joseph
Blenkinsopp of the University of Notre Dame lamented the inability of Christians to
"take Tanakh seriously on its own terms" (rather than traditional
apologetical ones), an inability which in turn has rendered it virtually impossible for
Christians to know "how to write an Old Testament theology" (p. 113). While the
theological dilemmas intertwined in Blenkinsopp's deceptively simple lament are far from
resolved, at least one approach to his ';how to" is emerging: Christians can write a
biblical theology if they do so not in isolation from, but in dialogue with, the Jewish
People.
Perhaps not coincidentally, the University of Notre Dame itself began work on this with a
conference, the papers of which have been edited by Roger Brooks and John Collins under the
title Hebrew Bible or Old Testament?: Studying the Bible in Judaism and Christianity (Notre
Dame, IN, 1990). Wrangling with the issues in addition to the editors and Blenkinsopp are
Roland Murphy, Josephine Massynbaerde Ford, James A. Sanders, Eugene Ulrich, Rolf Rendtorff,
Jon D. Levenson, David Levenson, James L. Kugel, Adela Yarbro Collins and Charles
Kannengiesser. This is a
nificant volume that deserves a wide distribution and readership. The terminological issue
has more recently been debated (in most friendly fashion) by Lawrence Boadt, C.S.P., and
myself, in the issues of the journal, New Theology Review (Liturgical Press,
Collegeville, MN 56321) for November 1991 (Vol. 4, No. 4), August 1991 (Vol. 5, No. 3), and
February 1993 (Vol. 6, No. 1).
Jon Levenson's essay from the Notre Dame volume is reprinted in his excellent collection,
The Hebrew Bible, the Old Testament and Historical Criticism: Jews and Christians in
Biblical Studies (Louisville, KY: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1993). Levenson, who is
increasingly emerging as a major figure in the field, takes on Christian biases in
historical criticism of both past and present, as well as the misuse of the Exodus by some
contemporary liberation theologians, a subject on which we shall have more to say later.
On a clearly popular level, two of the most prolific authors of modern times, Andrew M.
Greeley and Jacob Neusner, have combined to provide an example of what might be possible
with The Bible and Us: A Priest and A Rabbi Read Scripture Together (New York: Warner
Books, 1990). Ranging from Genesis through the prophets to the New Testament, the authors
comment on the text and gently prod the readers and each other to new perspectives. Rabbi
Michael Goldberg in Jews and Christians Getting Our Stories Straight: The Exodus and the
Passion-Resurrection (Philadelphia: Trinity Press International, 1991) in a sense tries
to hold down both sides of the dialogue by himself.
While the result is certainly of interest, it must be said that he is more effective in
presenting the Jewish than the Christian narrative. He has restricted himself solely to the
Gospel of Matthew, which is a bit misleading since the analogy between Jesus and Moses is
distinctive to that Gospel ignoring in the process the liturgical context of the nascent
Christian narrative as well as the other three Gospels. Jacob Neusner's A Rabbi Talks
with Jesus: An Intermillennial, Interfaith Exchange (New York: Doubleday, 1993) utilizes
the literary device of projecting himself into the Gospel of Matthew and offering his own
reflections and reactions to Jesus' words as he walks with him. This method does yield
insights and recommends itself to the general reader, although Neusner's understanding of
Matthew is a bit more "individualistic" than most Catholics would prefer.
The New Testament and Judaism
While a major issue in the previous category was how and whether Christians and Jews can
read together a (mostly) common biblical text, the issue facing the dialogue with respect to
the New Testament is how Christians can handle its often polemical portraits of Jews and
Judaism from the pulpit and in the classroom. The official Church mandates to do so are
already in place, as the documentation discussed above will amply illustrate. But how is the
official mandate to be translated into practical language and insights? An attempt to
provide background material for Christian preachers and teachers has been co-edited by David
Efroymson, myself and Leon Klenicki of the Anti-Defamation League as Within Context:
Essays on Jews and Judaism in the New Testament (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press,
1993). The contents define the range of issues that Christian educators need to take up.
Mary Boys, S.N.J.M., offers an alternative vision to ancient supersessionism. Anthony
Saldarini outlines the characteristics of "The Judaism Contemporary with Jesus."
Philip Cunningham and Urban von Wahlde deal with the positive and negative presentations of
Judaism in the Synoptic gospels and St. John, respectively. Terrance Callan treats Paul and
the Law, Efroymson Jesus and Opponents, and Fisher the Passion Narratives. The book includes
discussion questions and bibliography and can be used as a text and in teacher formation
programs. A short book on the Gospel of John also designed to combat the old "teaching
of contempt" by providing reflective material, this time for use in adult education
classes, is Philip S. Kaufman osb, The Beloved Disciple: Witness Against Anti-Semitism (Collegeville,
MN: Liturgical Press, 1991).
Two popular level volumes from the American Midwest, one Catholic and one Protestant,
complement one another in approaching with admirable directness the polemical strata of the
New Testament. George M. Smiga of St. Mary Seminary in Cleveland has produced in Pain and
Polemic: Anti- Judaism in the Gospels (Mahwah: Paulist/Stimulus, 1992) the more
systematic work, taking the reader book by book through the four Gospels and using the
latest research to explain how one may understand the ancient polemics today. Clark
Williamson and Ronald Allen of Christian Theological Seminary in Indianapolis have written a
very handy volume, Interpreting Difficult Texts: Anti-Judaism and Christian Preaching (London:
SCM and Philadelphia: Trinity 1989). The work defines the problem in general, sets it in
historical context in the early church, offers "case studies in selected texts,"
and will help the reader to develop sermons and other liturgical strategies to address the
problem responsibly.
Traveling back across the Atlantic and to a more academic plane James D.G. Dunn,
professor of Divinity at the University of Durham, has produced a magisterial study of The
Parting of the Ways Between Christianity and Judaism and their Significance for the
Character of Christianity (London: SCM and Philadelphia: Trinity, 1991) that may rival
in impact the works of E.P. Sanders that almost single-handedly put the issues of the
dialogue on the agenda of mainstream Christian biblical scholarship. Dunn surveys the
literature "from Baur to Sanders" as the basis for his own reflections,
summarizing what he calls the "four pillars of second temple Judaism" and the
relationship to them of Jesus' teaching and that of the early Church. Dunn has something
useful to say on just about every major issue. For example, it has long been the fashion
among Christians following J. Jeremias' work to see in Jesus' use of the term "abba,
Father" a proof not only of Jesus' intimacy with God but that of all
Christians vis-a-vis Jews who were not seen to be on such close terms with the divine. Dunn
affirms that the early Church saw this in its remembrance of Jesus' use of the term but goes
on to comment that "it often comes as something of a shock to realize that it was not
the same pre-Nicaea, not at any rate at the time of Jesus. In Jewish thinking of the first
century, 'son of God' was ... a way of characterizing someone who was thought to be
commissioned by God or highly favored by God ... but did not necessarily imply any overtones
of divinity" (pp. 170-171). Thus, Dunn neatly preserves what is valid in the abba hypothesis
while (if I may use the term) "deconstructing" it of its modern polemical edge.
Protestant scholar E.P. Sanders' Jewish Law from Jesus to the Mishnah: Five Studies (London:
SCM and Philadelphia: Trinity, 1990) deals with "The Synoptic Jesus and the Law";
"Did the Pharisees Have Oral Law?"; "Did the Pharisees Eat Ordinary Food in
Purity?"; "Purity, Food and Offerings in the Diaspora"; and last (but by no
means least!) "Jacob Neusner and the Philosophy of the Mishnah." Whatever one may
say about individual judgments of Sanders, he has succeeded admirably, as I indicated above,
in bringing to the center of the Christian biblical discussion the key issues of
Jewish-Christian dialogue. Sanders has collaborated with Margaret Davies of the University
of Bristol, England, in a textbook for advanced theology students, Studying the Synoptic
Gospels (London: SCM and Philadelphia: Trinity, 1989) teaching the various methodologies
of New Testament criticism.
Another major Protestant New Testament scholar working in the field is James H.
Charlesworth of Princeton Theological Seminary whose Jesus Within Judaism (Doubleday,
1988) I recommended in In Our Time. Since then, in addition to putting out the
newsletter, Explorations, Charlesworth has begun editing a series of volumes under
the sponsorship of Philadelphia's American Interfaith Institute. The volume Jesus'
Jewishness: Exploring the Place of Jesus in Early Judaism (New York: Crossroad, 1991)
includes essays on the New Testament by Jewish and Christian scholars Harvey Cox, David
Flusser, Daniel J. Harrington, S.J., Hans Küng, John P. Meier, Alan F. Segal, Ellis Rivkin
and Geza Vermes. My own Faith Without Prejudice: Rebuilding Christian Attitudes Towards
Jews and Judaism (Crossroad: Revised and expanded edition, 1993) is designed as a primer
for teachers and general educated readers in the Jewishness of Jesus' teaching and in how to
handle difficult texts such as the Passion Narratives. Appended are relevant documents and
bibliography.
A major Catholic scholar in the field is Daniel Harrington, whose Sacra Pagina commentary
on The Gospel of Matthew (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press/Michael Glazier Books,
1991) illustrates again the pervasive influence of Jewish-Christian dialogue on materials
designed not just for the dialogue but for general use by Christian clergy and educators.
Similarly, The Catholic Study Bible for The New American Bible (Oxford
University Press, 1990) edited by Donald Senior, et al., is destined for widespread
general use in the community for years to come. Most of its authors have been involved, in
one form or another, in Jewish-Christian dialogue and reflect its concerns as they take up
their commentaries on the books of the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament alike.
A resource in English from Israel is the special issue (24/25, 1990) of the journal, Immanuel,
edited by Malcolm Lowe, The New Testament and Christian-Jewish Dialogue: Studies in
Honor of David Flusser (Ecumenical Fraternity, POB 249, 91002 Jerusalem, Israel). The 18
articles by Jewish and Christian scholars living in Israel reflect the breadth of the
honoree's own studies. A Christian disciple of Flusser, Brad H. Young, has utilized the
master's techniques to produce a very thorough and useful study, Jesus and His Jewish
Parables (Mahwah: Paulist Press, Theological Inquiries Series, 1989). Clemens Thoma and
Michael Wyschogrod have edited for the Stimulus series Parable and Story in Judaism and
Christianity (Paulist, 1989).
Highlighting the ten essays are the paired studies of the Parable of the Wicked
Husbandmen by David Stern of the University of Pennsylvania and Aaron Milavec of the
University of Cincinnati. I liked especially also Flusser on "Aesop's Miser and the
Parable of the Talents"; Frank Kermode of King's College, Cambridge on "New Ways
with Bible Stories"; Romano Penna of Lateran University in Rome on "Narrative
Aspects of the Epistle to the Romans"; and Lawrence Boadt, C.S.P., on
"Understanding the Mashal and Its Value for Jewish-Christian Dialogue in
Narrative Theology."
Revising Christian understanding of the writings of St. Paul has been a major agenda item
since the Second Vatican Council relied so heavily on Romans 9-11 to advance its more
positive appreciation of the role of Judaism and the Jewish people in God's plan of
salvation. In a short but provocative book, Jesuit scholar Norbert Lohfink of the University
of Frankfurt sets forth twelve New Testament "theses" in The Covenant Never
Revoked: Biblical Reflections on Christian-Jewish Dialogue (Mahwah: Paulist, 1991).
Fellow Jesuit Daniel J. Harrington of Weston School of Theology in Cambridge, MA, undertakes
a general survey of the literature on the Pauline corpus in his masterful and concise (103
pages including index) Paul on the Mystery of Israel (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical
Press, Michael Glazier Books, 1992).
Again, I am struck with how much work has been done by Christian scholars on these
issues, to the point where someone like Harrington can discern some consensus emerging, even
where I might personally hope for a different result on a specific passage. A
thought-provoking fresh look at Paul from a Jewish perspective is taken by Alan F. Segal in Paul
the Convert: The Apostolate and Apostasy of Saul the Pharisee (New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1990). Even where Christian scholars disagree with Segal's analysis of the
Pauline letters and the psychology of their author, they will profit from working through
his theories.
A significant service has been done for the dialogue by Orbis Press in publishing the
volume, Bursting the Bonds? A Jewish-Christian Dialogue on Jesus and Paul (Maryknoll,
NY: Orbis Books, Faith Meets Faith Series, 1990). The volume brings together in truly
dialogical fashion Leonard Swidler (Catholic) and Lewis John Eron (Jewish) on Jesus/Yeshua
as a "Torah-true Jew" and Gerard Sloyan (Catholic) and Lester Dean (Jewish) on
Paul, the Law, and Hope for the Jews. It is a delightful exchange highlighted by the
thoughtful insights of Father Sloyan.
Hayim Goren Perelmuter's Siblings: Rabbinic Judaism and Early Christianity at Their
Beginnings (Mahwah: Paulist, 1989) is an excellent introduction for Christians not only
into rabbinic/New Testament parallels but even more so into some of the great figures of
early rabbinism. Perelmuter presents in readable fashion what is known of, and translates
sayings and tales ascribed to and about such seminal teachers as Simeon teen Shetah, Hillel,
Johanan teen Zakkai the Talmudic "odd couple" Eliezer and Joshua, Akiba, and Meir
and Elisha teen Abuya.
Jews and Christians in History
If I may say so, a volume eminently usable as an introduction whether for general
reading, in dialogue groups, or as a classroom text, is my own Interwoven Destinies: Jews
and Christians through the Ages (Mahwah: Paulist/Stimulus, 1993). The papers are taken
from the plenary sessions of the Ninth National Workshop on Christian-Jewish Relations in
Baltimore. The idea was to provide a Jewish and Christian reflection on each major
historical period from the first century beginnings to the present. These are: Daniel
Harrington and Michael Cook on the New Testament; Martha Himmelfarb and John Gager on
"the Parting of the Ways" (the Patristic/Talmudic period); Jeremy Cohen and Edward
Synan, FRSC, on the Medieval developments; and Alice Eckardt and Arthur Hertzberg,
respectively, on the Protestant Reformation and the Enlightenment. The dual perspectives on
our shared history, I believe, will provide enriching surprises for both Jewish and
Christian readers, as well as a reliable guide.
With regard to the early period of the relationship, previously mentioned Alan F. Segal
of Barnard College, Columbia University, has put out a useful study in Rebecca's
Children: Judaism and Christianity in the Roman World (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1986), concluding with reflections on "twin sons with different missions."
As in Perelmuter, the "siblings" analogy for the relationship between the
Christian Church and Rabbinic Judaism is more satisfying both as a matter of historical
chronology and as a theoretical paradigm for organizing the historical data. Jeffrey Siker's
Disinheriting the Jews: Abraham in Early Christian Controversy (Louisville:
Westminster/John Knox, 1991) traces how Abraham, originally viewed by St. Paul as the
"father of Jews and Gentiles alike," came in the second century, for example in
Justin Martyr's Dialogue with Trypho, to be seen as the "father of Christians
alone," thus marking the shift from Paul's arguments in favor of "Gentile
inclusion" to the patristic Church's move to "Jewish exclusion."
In "Be Fertile and Increase, Fill the Earth and Master It": The Ancient and
Medieval Career of a Biblical Text (Ithaca and London: Cornell University, 1989), Jeremy
Cohen, professor of history at Ohio State and Tel Aviv universities, undertakes a systematic
survey of biblical and later Jewish and Christian usages and interpretations of Genesis
1:28. The result is a masterful piece of scholarship that will debunk many stereotypes Jews
and Christians have of each other (e.g., what Jews think Christians believe about
"original sin," and what Christians think the text conveys about ecological
concenin). Particularly striking are the commonalities and parallels of understanding the
text despite the polemical stance between the two communities over the centuries.
Two volumes of the American Interfaith Institute series may also be placed in this
category, although as collections they are somewhat eclectic. Both edited by James H.
Charlesworth of Princeton University, they are Jews and Christians Exploring the Past,
Present and Future (New York: Crossroad, 1990) and Overcoming Fear Between Jews and
Christians (New York: Crossroad, 1992). Together, the two volumes comprise 24 articles
by Jewish and Christian scholars in several fields. There are, for example, articles by
major biblical scholars such as Charlesworth, J. Christian Beker, Roland Murphy, D. Moody
Smith, R. Alan Culpeper and Martin Hengel. There are specific historical articles, such as
Hans Hillerbrand on Martin Luther, Grover Zinn on "The Victorine Exegetical
Tradition," W. Barnes Tatum on Clement of Alexandria's "Philo-Semitism," and
Roger Fenn on the Holocaust. And there are more contemporary reflections, such as those by
A. Roy Eckardt, Hugh Anderson and Christopher Leighton, to mention just a few.
A scholarly article worthy of note is Matthias Neuman, osb, "Carolingian Monastic
Writers and the Ninth-Century Jewish Question," The American Benedictine Review (Vol.
42:3, Sept. 1991) 251-281, which turns out to be of more general interest with regard to the
larger trends of Jewish-Christian history than one might imagine from the title.
Liturgy and Spirituality
Again, I will mention one of my own books as a general, popular-level introduction
written for Christians but perhaps of interest also to Jews. The Jewish Roots of
Christian Liturgy (Mahwah: Paulist, 1990) gathers 15 articles from the pages of the
Roman journal, SIDIC, recommended above. Written by both Jews and Christians, the
essays delve into the Jewish origins of Christian liturgy, Jewish and Christian liturgies
with relation to life cycle events such as marriage and death, Sabbath and Sunday, and
"Liturgical Tensions and Renewal." Appended to the book is a document of the
National Conference of Catholic Bishops' Committee on the Liturgy, God's Mercy Endures
Forever: Guidelines on the Presentation of Jews and Judaism in Catholic Preaching (NCCB,
1988). This official statement illustrates how the bishops would like their priests and
deacons to proclaim the Gospel from the pulpit.
Carmine DiSante's Jewish Prayer: The Origins of Christian Liturgy (Mahwah:
Paulist, 1991) is more exhaustive and scholarly in style. It seeks to explain to Christian
readers the sources and structure of Jewish liturgy, private and communal phases of Jewish
prayer, and the major and minor Jewish "feasts." Even more scholarly is the
collection of essays edited by Tamara Eskenazi, Daniel Harrington, and William Shea, The
Sabbath in Jewish and Christian Traditions (New York: Crossroad, 1991). This includes 21
articles by leading Jewish and Christian biblical and liturgical scholars such as Robert
Goldenberg, Samuele Bacchiocchi, John Primus, Walter Wurzburger, Jacques Doukhan, John
Baldovin, and Lawrence Hoffman, covering rabbinic and New Testament, historical,
theological, liturgical, legal and ecumenical perspectives. A "must" for
researchers and libraries, but not casual readers.
College of Idaho professor Michael Lodahl's Shechinah/Spirit: Divine Presence in
Jewish and Christian Tradition (Mahwah, NJ:: Paulist/Stimulus, 1992) is an excursus in
process theology. It attempts to deal with the "Spirit of God" concept in both
Judaism and Christianity in terms of three theological "problems": religious
exclusivism (monotheism, trinitarianism); evil (the Zohar, Isaac Luria, the Holocaust); and
eschatology (creation, covenant, history). The result is worthwhile for the dialogue but
hard going for the non-professional.
The Shoah and Jewish-Christian
Relations
This continues, as it must, to be a central focus for the dialogue. First, now that the
nuns are out of the old theater adjacent to the Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp and moved into
their new convent near the Interfaith Center for Dialogue and Information established
nearby, I may mention two retrospective volumes that will be of help in assessing what,
after all, actually happened in the controversy. The first is by Wladyslaw Bartoszewski, a
Polish Catholic honored by Yad vaShem as among the righteous who is now professor of history
at the Catholic University in Lublin. Bartoszewski's The Warsaw Ghetto: A Christian's
Testimony (Boston: Beacon Press, 1987) remains a significant witness to the tragedy. His
book The Convent at Auschwitz (New York: George Brazillier, 1991) is hard-hitting yet
fair and frequently insightful into how the controversy was perceived within Poland. In Memory
Offended: The Auschwitz Convent Controversy, Carol Rittner and John K. Roth (New York:
Praeger, 1991) have edited the reflections of Jewish and Christian thinkers on the
controversy and its larger significance. With a useful appendix of key documents culminating
in the historic Pastoral letter of the Polish Catholic Bishops read in all parishes in the
country on January 20, 1991, the collection includes Richard Rubinstein, Ronald Modras, John
Pawlikowski, Gabriel Moran, Michael Berenbaum, the late Claire Huchet-Bishop (of blessed
memory), Judith Banki, Mary Jo Leddy, Albert Friedlander, Robert McAffee Brown, and several
survivors.
Two significant volumes on rescuers have been engendered by the Anti-Defamation League's
Jewish Foundation for Christian Rescuers. These are: Gay Block and Malka Drucker, editors, Rescuers:
Portraits of Moral Courage in the Holocaust (New York: Holmes and Meier, 1992); and
Mordecai Paldiel, The Path of the Righteous: Gentile Rescuers of Jews During the
Holocaust (Hoboken, NJ: KTAV, 1993). The two books, both organized according to country,
complement one another. The former volume transcribes and edits interviews with 49 rescuers
and includes searching photographs of them, and so achieves an immediacy and intimacy with
its subjects. The latter provides a more complete historical and narrative context for the
individual stories it tells and therefore the phenomenon as a whole. Harry James Cargas in Voices
from the Holocaust (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1993) adds to our primary
sources twelve interviews with survivors and rescuers ranging from Arnost Lustig and Yitzhak
Arad to Dorothy Sölle and Leo Eitinger.
For an overall assessment of the literature in the field up to the time of its
publication, Michael R. Marrus' The Holocaust in History (Hanover and London:
University Press of New England, 1987) remains the best statement I have seen on the status
guestionis. Some recent works pick up specific aspects of the history of the events of
and surrounding the Shoah in various countries. Stefan Korbonski, a Pole honored in
1980 by Yad Vashem, wrote The Jews and the Poles in World War II (New York:
Hippocrene, 1989), the dust jacket informs us, "to set the record straight." Only
136 pages in length and somewhat defensive in tone, Korbonski's account brings to bear
valuable documentary evidence that deserves to be weighed in any study of the Holocaust in
Poland.
Also worth taking into account, although not the last word, is Klaus Scholder's A Requiem
for Hitler and Other New Perspectives on the German Church Struggle (London: SCM and
Philadelphia: Trinity, 1989). The author, a German Lutheran, is perhaps more successful in
dealing: with the history of his own Church community. With regard to the Catholic Church,
he seems to feel the need to debunk what he felt was a prevailing Catholic self image
"of a church which was almost solid in its opposition to National Socialism" (p.
157, from a 1980 article included in the volume). I think, however, that more recent
documents from the German Catholic bishops' conference show that there is less need today
for such debunking. With regard to France, Paul Webster's Petain's Crime: The Full Story
of French Collaboration in the Holocaust (Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 1991) is again aimed at
challenging what the author, whether correctly or not, perceives to be a rather too benign
self-image on the part of the French as to the history of the Vichy government of Marshall
Petain and its treatment of the Jews.
The emotional content of all three of the above books dealing with Poland, Germany and
France reveals something of the rawness with which Western civilization still approaches the
massive trauma of the Second World War. It may be another generation before even our
historians achieve the level of balance and emotional distancing to truly "weigh"
the historical evidence in any definitive fashion. Albert H. Friedlander wrestles with his
personal demons of the past in A Thread of Gold: Journeys towards Reconciliation (London:
SCM and Philadelphia: Trinity, 1990), a set of reflections on his journeys to East and West
Germany in 1990. I found it moving and ultimately uplifting.
Also providing moving narrations on a popular level, and set into a helpfully drawn
historical framework, is Trudi Alexy's The Mezuzah in the Madonna's Foot (New York:
Simon and Schuster, 1993). Though subtitled "Oral Histories Exploring 500 years in the
Paradoxical Relationship of Spain and the Jews," the volume centers on the author and
several other Jews who found an "unlikely haven" in Spain in World War II. It also
details the stories of several rescuers (chiefly Lisa Fittko and Renee Reichmann) and
follows the more recent work of the Catholic and Jewish "reformers" in Barcelona.
Finally, there is an intriguing chapter on the "Crypto-Jews of the American
Southwest."
We can look forward to Suzan Zucotti's The Holocaust, the French and the Jews (New
York: Basic Books, 1993), which I have not yet read. But I remain so impressed with her
earlier work on the Italians that I would urge readers to check this one out.
We Americans, we should recall, are also part of the story. Mary Christine Athans, BVM,
who teaches history at the University of St. Thomas in Minneapolis, has produced a
fascinating bit of what I would call dark Americana in The Coughlin-Fahey Connection: Fr.
Charles Coughlin, Fr. Dennis Fahey, and Religious Anti-Semitism in the United States,
1938-1954 (New York: Peter Lang, 1991). Athans relies on correspondence between the two
priests found in the archives of the Irish Province of the Holy Ghost Congregation in
Dublin, and other materials not previously available to historians, to reveal the
distinctive intellectual history of Fr. Coughlin's theological antisemitism.
A book that I list with some diffidence for the sensitivities involved is the Thomas R.
Nevin biography, Simone Weil: Portrait of a Self-Exiled Jew (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 1991). I list it here because its nearly 500 pages do contain some
nuggets of historical interest, for example, concerning her experiences with Vichy France.
Reconstructing and evaluating the historical events of the Holocaust is only the
beginning of the task facing Jews and Christians in its wake. We must assess what to do with
our shared and separate memories for the sake of our children in terms of our basic
understanding of reality and human history.
Michael Berenbaum, project director for the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington
D.C., takes on this challenge from a Jewish perspective in After Tragedy and Triumph:
Essays in Modern Jewish Thought and the American Experience (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1990). With the Museum now open, Berenbaum's inside perspective on the
discussions and argumentation that went into it take on even greater interest. His
reflections, in the light of that attempt at an institutional and American remembrance of
the Holocaust, on the theories of Rosenzweig, Buber, Wiesel, Neusner, pluralism and Zionism
will be of interest not only to Jews but to Christians as well. For Christian teachers,
clergy and others, the Holocaust Museum's annual "Days of Remembrance: Guides for
Commemorative Programs" will remain a useful educational resource for years to come.
Stephen R. Haynes attempts a Christian approach to Prospects for Post-Holocaust
Theology (Atlanta: Scholars Press/American Academy of Religion, 1991) based uponoctr
writings of Barth, Moltmann and van Buren. Written as a doctoral dissertation for Emory
University, Haynes' study is thorough and succeeds admirably in presenting to the reader
what is most pertinent for Christian-Jewish understanding in the theologies of the three
Christian thinkers, although only Van Buren, of the three, has attempted a full-scale,
systematic revision of Christian theology in the light of the Shoah. Haynes is least
effective, in this reviewer's opinion, in his discussions with regard to Christian
understandings of the State of Israel. Instead of seeing Zionism straightforwardly as the
20th century liberation movement of the Jewish people, he tends to allow its critics to
frame the issue, defining Zionism rather as nationalism, which leads him to judge negatively
(and I think unfairly), for example, much of van Buren's work.
This brings us to the collections of essays by Jews and Christians on the Holocaust. In
the interest of fair advertising and (as we say in my town) "full disclosure," I
must note that I have a contribution in each of the next four works. Alan L. Berger, ea., Bearing
Witness to the Holocaust, 1939-1989 (Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 1991) comprises
21 papers presented at the 19th Annual Scholars' Conference on the Holocaust and Church
Struggle held in Philadelphia in 1989. They are divided into five categories: Survivor
Testimonies (H. Hirsh, E. Tanay, N. Tec); Philosophical Responses (R. Kalechofsky, R.
Melson, S. Katz, R. Rubenstein, R. Smith); Religious Responses a. Fischel, G.
Greenberg, P. Marcus and A. Rosenberg, R. Ross); Artistic Responses (B. Asbury, R. Brenner,
S. Pentlin, I. Zarecka); and The Aftermath (Z. Garber, R. Pierard, R. Eckardt, E. Fisher, M.
Rosenbloom).
Steven L. Jacobs, rabbi of Temple B'nai Sholom in Huntsville, Alabama, solicited ten
Christian and ten Jewish scholars for a two volume set of Contemporary Jewish and
Christian Religious Responses to the Shoah (Lanham, NY: University Press of American,
1993): S. Jacobs, M. Berenbaum, M. Ellis, E. Fackenheim, P. Haas, B. Maza, R. Rubenstein, A.
Waskow, H.J. Cargas, A. Davies, A. Eckardt, E. Fisher, D. Huneke, T. Idinopolous, M.
McGarry, J. Pawlikowski, R. Ruether and J. Roth.
Sr. Mary Noel Kernan, SC, has put together ten papers from the First Scholars' Conference
on the Teaching of the Holocaust under the title Peace/Shalom After Atrocity Greensburg,
PA: Seton Hill College/National Catholic Center for Holocaust Education, 1989). These deal
with educational issues such as my own, "Why Teach the Holocaust?"; Michael
McGarry's "Practical Considerations in Teaching the Holocaust"; George Diestel on
the Humanities; Patricia Farrant on Holocaust Literature; Roger Gottlieb on
"Remembering"; Gershon Greenberg on "American Catholics During the
Holocaust"; Myrna Goldenberg on "Women Remembering the Holocaust"' and
Frederick Schweitzer on History and Antisemitism. Sr. Carol Rittner, RSM, has edited what I
feel is a very interesting set of Christian and Jewish essays in Elie Wiesel: Between
Memory and Hope (NY: New York University Press, 1990). Some highlights are the papers of
Daniel Stern, Dow Marmur, Marcel Dubois, Eva Fleischner, Robert McAfee Brown, and Cardinal
Jean-Marie Lustiger.
Politics and Polemics
This again is a new category, and not a happy one. I include it because honesty is a
higher virtue than pleasantness. First, the politics. Here, the unpleasantness is on the
Christian side. I refer to the heavily politicized, anti-Zionist recent works of Rosemary
Radford Ruether. Although a few Christian scholars of stature reacted positively to
Ruether's overstated arguments in her 1974 Faith and Fratricide, many, especially
those involved already in the dialogue, responded negatively. The book, however, seems to
have struck a sympathetic chord among Jews, many of whom set up her dictum,
"Antisemitism is the left hand of Christology" as the yardstick by which to judge
other Christian thinkers. Several years ago Michael McGarry warned against the proclivity on
the part of some in the Jewish community to judge Christian thinkers on the basis of how
close they come to the most radical positions. Such idealization of what are destined to be
at most fringe Christian positions, and which have no meaningful chance of being adopted by
the larger Christian community, can lead to confusion and unwarranted disappointment.
Ruether's tendency to argue from and to extremes has now zone full circle. Her book, The
Wrath of Jonah: The Crisis of Religious Nationalism in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict (San
Francisco: Harper and Row, 1989), written with her husband, Herman J. Ruether, former
director of the Palestine Human Rights Campaign in Evanston, IL, is a straight "good
guy/bad guy" thriller. The "Zionists," of course, are the bad guys and the
source of all evil in the Middle East, with the Palestinians and other Arabs playing the
part of the victims that Ruether had reserved for the Jews in Faith and Fratricide. While
strong critiques of Israeli governmental actions and policies are, in my view, certainly in
order in the dialogue, Ruether makes the jump to what I would call the
"demonization" of Zionism, which is another level of rhetoric altogether than the
"prophetic" that she invokes in justification. The highly critical reactions of
responsible Christian scholars involved in the dialogue to the Ruethers' Wrath may be
found in a symposium in the journal Continuum (New York: Crossroad, and Chicago: St.
Xavier College, Autumn 1990, pp. 105-136). In my own view, I would have to conclude that
Rosemary Ruether has, unfortunately, allowed ideology to overtake her scholarship.
While it contains several articles by very good scholars and is more balanced than Wrath,
R.R. Ruether and Marc Ellis, editors, Beyond Occupation: American Jewish, Christian,
and Palestinian Voices for Peace (Boston: Beacon Press, 1990), is a questionable
offering. In a startling display of editorial pique, for example, the editors at the end of
the volume argue with and seek to devalue precisely the thinkers whose participation they
invited to give the volume some sense of realism. Irving Greenberg, Arthur Hertzberg, John
Pawlikowski, Robert McAfee Brown, and even Michael Lerner are found wanting by the editors.
Rosemary Ruether, in her concluding essay, curiously wants to position herself in a
transcendent position "Beyond Antisemitism and Philo-Semitism." I do not believe
she has succeeded in moving much beyond the first, nor would I view moving beyond the second
to be much of a goal to which a Christian should aspire.
Like Ruether, Hyam Maccoby, Librarian of Leoory.ck College, London, came to prominence
with a book that many consider to have become a classic, Judaism on Trial:
Jewish-Christian Disputations in the Middle Ages (Rutherford, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson
University, 1981). So far as I know, this book has stood the test of time better than
Ruether's. But Maccoby seems to have gotten stuck, as it were, in the time period he
analyzed so well. In his subsequent works he tends to presume that the situation that
existed in the Middle Ages was also true, without significant difference, in the centuries
before and after the period of the disputations. Briefly, Maccoby views history as basically
flat, so that things that were said or believed in the High Middle Ages are present in full
bloom in texts written a thousand years earlier. Paul and Hellenism (London: SCM and
Philadelphia: Trinity, 1991) and Judas Iscariat and the Myth of Jewish Evil (New
York: Macmillan: The Free Press, 1992) present themselves as objective scholarly studies of
Christianity. And the author doubtlessly sincerely believes that they are. But in my view
they should more properly be categorized as polemical literature. Both read as if Maccoby
were somehow personally engaged in a medieval dispute and is launching in that context
devastating barbs against the Christian faith. This makes for stimulating reading and, if
one is Jewish, one could well issue an understandable cheer now and then at Maccoby's verbal
pyrotechnics. But readers should not confuse this genre of writing with scholarly work that
will in fact tell them anything meaningful or significant about Christianity or Christians.
Christians have been reduced to a caricature (as Christians themselves have done so often in
the past to Jews and therefore doubtlessly deserve to be).
Similarly, Joel Carmichael, the redoubtable editor of Midstream, has indulged in a
flight of comforting fantasy in his The Satanizing of the Jews: Origin and Development of
Mystical AntiSemitism (New York: Fromm International, 1992), inventing a Christianity
that is an easy target for his debunking rather than doing the hard work of grappling with
the real intransigencies and complexities of history. The problem with this genre of Jewish
anti-Christian polemics is not that we Christians don't deserve to be hoisted on our petard
in this fashion. We do. And it is impossible not to admire the verve and spirit with which
these two powerful rhetoricians skewer Christianity by parodying it. The problem is that
this type of literature can obscure the real difficulties that must be faced by Jews and
Christians together by refusing to allow one side the integrity of its own belief and
traditions. This repeats but does not solve the ancient error.
Readers may find it odd to find a work by one of the foremost theologians of our time
included in this section on polemics. But I believe Hans Küng's massive Judaism: Between
Yesterday and Today (New York: Crossroad, 1992) fits this category. Küng attempts to
summarize all of the Jewish history and thought through paradigm theory. But in this
instance that theory turns into a procrustean bed. A key test of any attempt to describe
another religious tradition is whether members of that tradition will actually see
themselves in the attempted description. In this case, I do not believe that very many Jews
will see Judaism depicted here either accurately or sympathetically. This book tells us a
lot about what kind of religion would be an ideal one in Küng's mind. But it tells us
almost nothing about what Judaism in its many manifestations over the centuries has been,
is, or could be. In short, it fails to live up to its title and cannot be recommended.
Toward a Theological Encounter
This section takes its name from a wonderful volume edited by Rabbi Leon Klenicki, Toward
a Theological Encounter: Jewish Understandings of Christianity (Mahwah:
Paulist/Stimulus, 1991). It has long been noted, by John Pawlikowski and others, that the
Jewish community has never subjected itself to the discipline of attempting official joint
statements that would be the counterpart to the numerous Christian statements of the
Catholic and Protestant Churches. In part, this is because of the asymmetrical nature of the
history of persecution of Jews by Christians and the teaching of contempt, and in part it is
because of the distinctive nature of Jewish religious polity. But it has resulted in a lack
of systematic response by the Jewish community to Christian outreach in our time (with the
major exception of Eugene Borowitz, Contemporary Christologies: A Jewish Response (NY: Paulist,
1980)). By involving Jewish scholars from across a goodly percentage of the Jewish spectrum,
Klenicki (Reform) brings together in one volume a representative sampling of informed Jewish
opinion on the theological issues that unite, divide, and continue to challenge Jewish and
Christian dialogical reflection in the waning days of the twentieth century of our
relationship. Included are S. David Breslauer of the University of Kansas (Reform), David
Dalin of the University of Hartford (Conservative), Elliot Dorff of the University of
Judaism-LA (Conservative), Walter Jacob of CCAR, David Novak of the University of Virginia
(Conservative), Norman Solomon of the Centre for the Study of Judaism at Selly Oak Colleges,
Birmingham, England (Orthodox), and Michael Wyschogrod, Professor Emeritus of Baruch
College, CUNY (Orthodox). If there ever is a group called together to issue a common Jewish
response to the dialogue, this volume should be required reading.
Also from the Jewish side, Jacob Neusner (now of the University of South Florida) has
become increasingly, and in my view helpfully, involved in the dialogue. Though never one to
be accused of understating his positions, his works will reward careful and discerning
reading. With due deference to Arthur Cohen, for example, Neusner's Jews and Christians:
The Myth of a Common Tradition (London: SCM and Philadelphia: Trinity, 1991) argues
forcefully that Jewish and Christian traditions represent "different people talking
about different things to different people" over the centuries and hardly anything that
can be characterized as a true dialogue such as we are at least striving for today.
Similarly, Telling Tales: Making Sense of Christian and Judaic Nonsense (Louisville,
KY: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1993) delves through the history of Judeo-Christian
"monologues" and seeks to discover for today "a Judaic way of telling the
Christian tale of Jesus Christ" and "a Christian telling of the Judaic tale -
Israel instead of Adam." Neusner remains capable of the well-turned phrase; e.g.
"good will makes bigots into hypocrites" (p. 80). That line alone is worth the
price of admission.
Harold Kasimov and Byron Sherwin have edited a fitting tribute to a man whose
contribution to the dialogue continues to be profound. No Religion Is an Island: Abraham
Joshua Heschel and Interreligious Dialogue (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1991) begins with a
moving foreword by Cardinal Johannes Willebrands recalling Heschel's role at the time of the
Second Vatican Council. There are also essays by his daughter, Susannah; Daniel Berrigan,
with whom Heschel co-founded "Clergy Concerned about the War" in the mid- 1960s;
John C. Bennett of Union Theological Seminary in New York; the late Jerzy Kosinski; Heschel
scholar John C. Merkle of the College of St. Benedict in St. Joseph, MN; Muslim scholar
Riffat Hassan; Hindu Arvind Sharma, and myself among others.
Susannah Heschel and I also have essays in Clark Williamson's A Mutual Witness: Toward
Critical Solidarity Between Jews and Christians (St. Louis, MO: Chalice Press), wich
contains the papers and discussions from a 1991 conference at Christian Theological Seminary
in Indianapolis. A. Roy Eckardt and Williamson give Protestant responses to the theme
question, "Is There a Christian Mission to the Jews?" Not surprisingly, though for
different reasons and in different ways, the four of us answer "No" to the common
question. The organizers perhaps unwittingly skewed the symmetry of the event and of the
volume somewhat by inviting Jewish liberation theologian Marc H. Ellis of the Maryknoll
School of Theology. Ellis, who has little time for any agenda item other than his own,
declared the Jewish-Christian dialogue "dead" and went on to tell us how to go
"beyond the ecumenical dialogue," which is to say to adopt his views as our own.
Despite this distraction, there is much in the volume to challenge Christian thought on
mission and evangelization.
Catholic scholar Gabriel Moran, who is professor of religious education at New York
University, relentlessly pursues the concept of Uniqueness: Problem or Paradox in Jewish
and Christian Traditions (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1992). More than simply a study in the
language of dialogue, Moran probes what we mean by the use of the term in reference to
revelation, covenant, holocaust and Christ. Frans Jozef van Beek, SJ, has written previously
on Catholic identity. Now he attempts to make a contribution to the dialogue with Loving
the Torah More than God? Towards a Catholic Appreciation of Judaism (Chicago: Loyola
University Press, 1989). The title is taken from a 1955 radio address by Emmanuel Levinas,
which is here translated. Also published here, Zvi Kolitz' 1947 Holocaust
"parable" Yossel Rakover's Appeal to God. Beek adds his own spiritual
reflection to those of Levinas to develop a powerful, short meditation that will be of
interest to Jews as well as Christians.
Two volumes of more general theological reflection may be of interest in the context of
this bibliographical survey. Francis A. Sullivan, SJ, Salvation Outside the Church? (Mahwah:
Paulist, 1992) traces the history and various interpretations of the patristic phrase extra
ecclesiam nulla salus over the centuries. This much misunderstood phrase (as late as the
mid- 20th century Jesuit Father Leonard Feeney was excommunicated for teaching a literal
interpretation of it) has been much abused by Christians. Sullivan here attempts to set the
record straight. Maura O'Neill, Women Speaking, Women Listening: Women in Interreligious
Dialogue (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 199-0) is not just about Jewish-Christian relations but
aims, as its introduction states, "toward a genuine approach to religious
pluralism" reflecting recent trends in epistemology, communication and value theory,
and seeking to discern 'Is religion liberating?" for women.
I will conclude this theological survey with reference to A. Roy Eckardt's Reclaiming
the Jesus of History: Christology Today (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1992). Eckardt, one of
the great pioneers of Christian-Jewish relations, here joins Paul van Buren in the effort to
integrate perspectives gained from the dialogue into mainstream Systematic Theology. After
some preliminaries, Eckardt presents and reflects upon "five historical images" of
Jesus: "countercultural spiritualizer", "rejected advocate of Israel's
restoration"; "champion of Israel"; "Liberator of the Wretched";
and "Redeemer of Women." In "From Jesus to Christ" he discusses
"the Christs of the Apostolic Writings"; engages in dialogue with van Buren, Paul
F. Knitter, and John Macquarrie; and reviews and refines his controversial views on the
Resurrection. Only someone who has spent a lifetime of quiet study and free-flowing debate
could have produced this provocative and significant volume.
Israel, Liberation Theology and Jewish-Christian-Muslim Trilateral Dialogue
The "liberation theology" portion of this category comprises several volumes
put out by Orbis Press. The involvement of liberation theologians in dialogue directly with
Jews will be a very healthy development, although these works reflect the fact that this
dialogue is just beginning. Otto Maduro, a Venezuelan theologian who teaches at Maryknoll,
has edited Judaism, Christianity and Liberation (Maryknoll: Orbis, 1991). Irving
Greenberg, in one of the most honest "blurbs" I have yet seen on the back cover of
a book, correctly calls it "unjust and one-sided in its treatment of Zionism (but)
worthwhile reading." It is worthwhile for the insight it gives through reading the
three Christian liberation theologians' essays (Leonardo Boff, Pablo Richard, and Julio de
Santa Ana) that liberation theology really has little idea of Jews and Judaism beyond the
bounds of the Hebrew Bible (which for them remains the "Old Testament"). It is
worthwhile because the liberal Jewish Voices (Michael Lerner, Phyllis Taylor, Arthur Waskow)
are true to form. And it is worthwhile because Richard Rubenstein, Dorothee Sölle and
Norman Solomon cannot be uninteresting even when one disagrees. The book also contains
essays by Rosemary Radford Ruether and Marc H. Ellis, about whom I have said enough above.
Dan Cohn-Sherbok of the University of Kent, Canterbury, attempts a more systematic
theology of liberation for both Jews and Christians in On Earth as It Is in Heaven: Jews,
Christians, and Liberation Theology (Maryknoll: Orbis, 1987). How successful he is, I
think, depends on one's stance on the issues he raises. A rather typical example of the use
of (some will say "abuse") of the Hebrew Bible for the purposes of Christian
liberation theology is found in Shigeyuki Nakasone, Josiah Passover: Sociology and the
Liberating Bible (Maryknoll: Orbis, 1993). Nakasone is a Catholic priest working in
Brazil. One can only applaud the moral fervor of the author and the ongoing vitality of the
Hebrew Bible and its ability to inspire generation after generation of Christians as well as
Jews.
Of greater interest for the purpose of the dialogue are two books which collect essays by
Jews, Christians and Palestinians actually living in Israel and the Territories. These are,
first, Haim and Rivca Gordon's Israel/Palestine: The Quest for Dialogue (Maryknoll:
Orbis, 1991). Unabashedly 'Peace Now' in orientation, the volume introduces voices that have
since become well-known outside of Israel. These include Shulamit Aloni, Faisal Husseini,
Felicia Langer and Hanan Ashrawi. Catholic priest David Burrell, CSC, and Oz veShalom
director Yehezkel Landau have jointly edited Voices from Jerusalem: Jews and Christians
Reflect on the Holy Land (Mahwah: Paulist/Stimulus, 1992). While generally liberal in
orientation, the spectrum of thought is wider than the books noted thus far in this section.
Authors include Shahe Ajamian of the Armenian Church; Peter deBrul, SJ, of Bethlehem
University; Marcel Dubois, OP, of Hebrew University; the late Andre Neher of Strasbourg
University; Simon Schoon of Nes Ammim; and Ben Gurion University's Pinchas Peli, of blessed
memory.
To "balance the ticket" (as we also say here in my town of Washington, D.C.), I
would recommend Cynthia Ozick's more conservative collection of Jewish and Christian essays,
The Middle East: Uncovering the Myths (New York: Anti Defamation League, 1991). The
papers were prepared for a conference sponsored by Writers and Artists for Peace by Edward
Alexander, Richard John Neuhaus, Daniel Pipes, Eugene V. Rostow and Ruth R. Wisse.
For the February, 1991, issue of Ecumenical Trends (Garrison, NY: Graymoor
Ecumenical Institute, 10524) my colleague for Interreligious Relations here at the
Conference, Dr. John Borelli, and I collaborated with Drs. Jay Rock and R. Marston Speight,
our counterparts at the National Council of Churches, to produce "The Abrahamic
Traditions in Trilateral Dialogue: A Selected Bibliography." The following items are
excerpted from that article.
Introductory Materials
Raphael Bonanno, OFM, ea., Jews, Moslems and Christians: Children of God (Jerusalem:
Franciscan Printing House, 1988). Generally Christian, the materials here are most helpful
as a beginning resource.
"Children of Abraham," Dialogue: A Journal of Theology (Vol. 29, Winter,
1990) is a special issue of the Lutheran quarterly.
A. Falturi, J. Petuchowski and W. Strolz, eds., Three Ways to the One God: The Faith
Experience of Judaism, Christianity and Islam (Crossroad, 1987) provides essays on the
function of prophecy in the three traditions.
John Hick and E.S. Meltzer, eds., Three Faiths - One God: A Jewish, Christian, Muslim
Encounter (SUNY Press, 1989) collects reflections on the respective views of God, the
earth and humanity.
F.E. Peters, Children of Abraham: Judaism, Christianity, Islam (Princeton
University Press, 1982), while mentioned in my 1989 bibliography for In Our Time, remains
the best single volume introduction.
Peters' three-volume set, Judaism, Christianity and Islam: The Classical Texts and
their Interpretation (Princeton University Press, 1990) arranges basic texts topically
to demonstrate the kinds of issues that have been the concerns of the three communities
through their histories.
David Burrell, CSC, and Bernard McGinn in God and Creation: An Ecumenical Symposium (University
of Notre Dame Press, 1990) present papers on the doctrine of creation in the three
traditions.
Jerusalem
In addition to the above-mentioned volume by Burrell and Landau (which was essentially
Jewish-Christian), one can cite for background reading Saul Colbi, A History of Christian
Presence in the Holy Land (University Press of America, 1988), which concentrates mainly
on the British Mandate period and was reviewed by our group as "helpful informth
dn" but gives an incomplete picture.
F.E. Peters, Jerusalem the Holy City in the Eyes of Chroniclers, Visitors, Pilgrims
and Prophets from the Days of Abraham to the Beginning of Modern Times (Princeton
University Press, 1985), and Jerusalem and Mecca: The Typology of the Holy City in the
Near East (New York University Press, 1986). N. Biggar, J. Scott, and Wm. Schweiker,
eds., Cities of Gods: Faith, Politics and Pluralism in Judaism, Christianity and Islam (Greenwood,
1986) provide advanced reading in theology and politics.
This essay originally appeared in CCAR Journal: A Reform Jewish Quarterly,
Winter 1994.
With kind permission of the author.
Bibliographic Update 1993 - 1999 |