The other in Israel
 
 
 
Orthodox rabbis reckon with Christianity


Jun  05, 2014 by _Mordechai Beck_ 
(http://www.christiancentury.org/contributor/mordechai-beck)  
 
Read the _interview with Rabbi David Rosen_ 
(http://www.christiancentury.org/article/2014-05/beginning-talk) . 
Christian-Jewish relations may be a topic familiar to many American  
Christians, but it is not often taken up by Orthodox rabbis within Israel. The  
Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies, a secular think tank, recently hosted 
a  discussion on the topic to mark the publication in Hebrew of a booklet by 
an  American rabbi titled “Christianity in the Eyes of Judaism.” The 
author, Eugene  Korn, was among the Orthodox rabbis invited to address the 
topic. 
The discussion  and the Hebrew publication were both sponsored by the 
American Jewish  Committee. 
Korn, who is North American director of the Center for Jewish-Christian  
Understanding and Cooperation, offered a historical overview of the  
relationship. He noted that in the first two or three centuries of the common  
era, 
when Christianity was taking root and Jews had to contend with its rising  
popularity, the rabbis were highly critical of what they viewed as Christians’ 
 worship of an idol. The medieval period gave rise to a more positive view. 
A  number of rabbis of that era observed that at least Christians believed 
in a  divine creator, biblical morality, and the coming of the messianic 
age. 
Amnon Ramon of the Jerusalem institute turned the discussion to current  
issues in Israel. He pointed to acts of discrimination against Christians, and 
 especially to the actions of radical Jewish settlers who are part of the 
Tag  Mehir (or “price tag”) movement. This group responds to perceived 
threats to  Israeli settlers in the occupied territories by punishing 
Palestinian 
or  Christian groups by defacing or vandalizing their property. He reported 
that  when members of the Tag Mehir group were taken to court, “the lawyer 
for the  defense stated that freedom of expression allows you to spit at 
your adversary.”  (The court was not impressed by that argument.) 
Ramon said the institute had surveyed the attitudes of Israeli Jews toward  
Christians in Israel and found that as the age of the interviewees went 
down,  the level of intolerance went up. 
“Local-born Israelis have little firsthand knowledge of Christians, and 
they  receive little or no study of other religions in school. This is true of  
religious and secular schools alike. When schoolchildren visit Jerusalem, 
for  example, very few enter churches. So there is a minimum awareness of ‘
the other’  given to them in schools. Thus they are not given any direction in 
terms of the  complex situation, particularly in Jerusalem. We have a lot 
of work to do to  improve this situation.” 
Rabbi David Rosen, founder of the Interreligious Coordinating Council in  
Israel and one of the conveners of the meeting, said that this situation is  
precisely what made the conference so important. “The rabbis assembled here 
are  pioneers in the Torah world in that they are dealing with this issue.” 
Rosen noted that Korn’s booklet would be distributed among educational  
institutions, yeshivot (rabbinical seminaries), and synagogues in  Israel, “
where hopefully it will be read and studied.” He added: “There is  generally a 
lack of knowledge or interest in the subject matter among rabbis.  
Nevertheless I think the situation has improved over what it was ten or 20 
years  
ago.” 
Korn said his work grew out of two major events. One was the creation of 
the  state of Israel. “That transformed us. We were no longer a weak people. 
We are a  strong people, with a place in the world. We are no longer 
subordinate to  others. This is a major change in our identity and in the 
history of 
our  people.” 
The second event was the transformation in the Christian view of Judaism 
that  occurred in the shadow of the Holocaust. He observed that almost all 
heads of  churches in the United States have visited Israel and that there is 
widespread  agreement on key points—on rejecting anti-Semitism and the old 
claim that the  Jews are guilty of deicide; on believing that the church must 
repent for its  part in the Holocaust; on recognizing the state of Israel as 
the state of the  Jewish people; and on rethinking attempts to convert Jews 
to Christianity. 
In responding to this revolution in the Christian world, Rabbi Korn said, 
he  is careful not to transgress Jewish law. “As a religious Jew I am 
concerned with  whether there is a problem in halakhah [Jewish law] in taking a 
more  positive attitude toward Christianity. After an extensive search, I 
concluded  that there is no overwhelming obstacle. Many religious Jews don’t 
realize that  some of the great rabbis from the 16th century onward insisted 
that Christianity  is not idolatry for gentiles.” 
Korn quoted, among other rabbinical sources, the 19th-century German rabbi  
Jacob Emden: “Jesus brought a double goodness to the world—he removed 
idolatry,  and he obligated the nations of the world to follow the seven 
commands of the  Sons of Noah, so they shouldn’t be like the animals of the 
field, 
and he  instilled them with moral faith. We should view Christianity as the 
fulfillment  of the prophecy that one day the world will be filled with the 
knowledge of  God.” 
Korn concluded that there is no obstacle to appreciating Christians and  
Christianity. “But unfortunately,” he added, “not too many people learn this 
in  yeshiva.” 
“As a religious Jew,” said Korn, “I believe that Christians believe in 
many  of the fundamentals of Judaism. So religiously there is every reason to 
have  better relations. . . . Christians were our enemies for 1,900 years—
they  persecuted us and tortured us. There is no way we can restore the victims 
of  these persecutions. But the question for us is can we make the world a 
better  place for our grandchildren. I believe that a full appreciation of 
the Christian  world . . . is both possible and desirable.” 
Rabbi Schlomo Riskin, founder of the Center for Jewish-Christian  
Understanding and Cooperation, spoke of his own journey of interfaith 
discovery,  
influenced by David Flusser, a teacher at the Hebrew University in the  1960s: 
“I learned from Flusser about Jesus the Jew, that every word that came from 
 his mouth had its source in the Torah. The Jewish people entered the world 
with  a sign of holiness—this is our universal message and we have to 
explain it to  the world. In Israel, we have not taken the responsibility of 
having a universal  message. Yet the temple was a place where all the peoples 
of 
the world could  come to pray in their own way.” 
A word of caution was uttered by Oded Wiener, director general of the Chief 
 Rabbinate of Israel: “There are many who are not excited by these 
dialogues.”  Partly this resistance grows out of an awareness of a resurgent 
anti-Semitism in  Europe, he said. But he also reported on hopeful 
developments, 
such as the  creation of a website where Palestinians can discuss the acts of 
Tag Mehir and  carry on a dialogue with various religious groups. “We’ve 
gone far in  encountering the others. It’s for us to overcome our history.” 
“Most Israelis have never heard of these dialogues,” Ramon concluded. “It 
is  therefore necessary to bring this news to the  people.”

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