The Church and Jewish Ideology
(Reprinted from SOBRAN’S, May 1999, page 4)
The
prevalent Jewish myth today is not the founding myth of Abraham or Moses on
Sinai, but the story of Jewish persecution. In our time the Jews are defined
less by ancestry than by “anti-Semitism,” which is cited for many purposes,
including the legitimation of the state of Israel. Most Zionists no longer claim
that God gave the Holy Land to the Jews; instead they contend that the Jewish
state is necessary as a haven for world Jewry.
According to this modern myth, the Jews are in no way
responsible for their own unpopularity from ancient times. What, then, is the
source of such persistent hostility to this fundamentally innocent people? Why,
the Catholic Church, of course!
Many
Jewish scholars find the seed of anti-Semitism in the Gospels of Matthew and
John, where the Jews are depicted as engineering the Crucifixion, with the
assistance of Romans who “know not what they do.” Some Jews have even demanded
that the offending passages be deleted from the Scriptures, not realizing (or
caring) that Christians regard their holy books as off-limits to human editing.
Others persist in blaming Pius XII for failing to condemn Nazism more strongly
for its persecution of the Jews of Europe. The Catholic Church in particular has
been targeted as the historic matrix of anti-Semitism; and unfortunately, many
churchmen have accepted the role of defendant against accusers who will never
acquit the Church or drop the case.
In recent years the Vatican has tried, as far as possible, to
appease Jewish objections. The Second Vatican Council, mindful of Nazi crimes,
proclaimed that today’s Jews don’t share the guilt of the Jews who conspired to
murder Christ. Pope John Paul II has been especially eager to cultivate good
relations with the Jews, even making an unprecedented visit to a Roman synagogue
a few years ago. He has gone so far as to name Steven Spielberg’s
Schindler’s List as one of his favorite films — though it contains
scenes of nudity and simulated intercourse.
In this spirit, the Vatican last year promulgated We
Remember, a statement of repentance for the failures of the Church and
the mass of Christians during the Holocaust (or Shoah, the Hebrew word
that has become current lately). Its theme was that “erroneous and unjust
interpretations of the New Testament” have contributed to anti-Semitism; and
that the Church, though never a party to persecution, should have done more to
oppose the “unspeakable tragedy” of the Shoah, which “can never be forgotten.”
The statement also affirmed the Church’s “very close bonds of spiritual kinship
with the Jewish people” and the “Hebrew roots of [Catholic]
faith.”
Many Jews resented the
statement’s exculpation of the Church for the Shoah itself. The document
distinguished sharply between regrettable Christian attitudes toward the Jews
throughout European history (it made no reference to Jewish attitudes toward
Christians) and the virulent nationalist and racialist anti-Semitism that arose
in the nineteenth century. Predictably, a Jewish historian has rejected this
distinction.
In an article in the
April issue of Commentary, “The Pope, the Church, and the Jews,”
Robert S. Wistrich, professor of modern Jewish history at the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, attacks We Remember for defending Pius XII and for
minimizing the Church’s guilty role in fostering anti-Semitism through the ages.
Wistrich belittles Pius’s efforts to protect Jews as not only insufficient but
lacking in “moral courage.” As for the nineteenth-century anti-Semitic
ideologies, they “presupposed a cultural framework that had been fashioned by
centuries of medieval Christian theology, ecclesiastical policy, and popular
religious myth.”
This is nothing new
for Commentary, which has previously carried articles blaming
Christianity itself for the Holocaust. Wistrich doesn’t cite, though he might as
well have, the charge of the Jewish scholar Jules Isaac that “the permanent and
latent source of anti-Semitism is none other than Christian religious teaching
of every description, and the traditional, tendentious interpretation of the
Scriptures.” Isaac’s work and influence helped shape the Second Vatican
Council’s statement about the Jews.
By such reasoning as Wistrich’s, it would be easy to blame the
Jews for bringing persecution on themselves. After all, they have been unpopular
not only in Christian countries, but in pagan and Muslim lands. Cicero, Tacitus,
Juvenal, and other Roman authors inveighed against them. They have repeatedly
migrated to Christian countries and have been repeatedly expelled, for reasons
that have usually had little to do with theology — though the obscene
blasphemies against Christ and his mother in the Talmud, unique in religious
literature, besides reflecting oddly on Jewish demands for Christian tolerance
and for the cleansing of offensive passages in the Gospels, have done nothing to
endear the Jews to Christians.
Wistrich mentions none of this. Nor does he mention one of the
principal incitements to anti-Semitism in this century: Jewish participation in
Communism, with its terrifying persecution of Christians. Where is the
corresponding statement of Jewish leaders repudiating and repenting the Jewish
role in a cause whose crimes dwarf those of Hitler? Did major Jewish spokesmen
or organizations condemn Communism as it devoured tens of millions of
Christians? Did a few brave Jews in the Soviet Union and the other
Communist-ruled countries act, at personal risk, to shield Christians from
arbitrary arrest and murder? Even today, how many Jews condemn Franklin
Roosevelt for his fondness for Stalin, as they would condemn him if he had shown
the slightest partiality to Hitler?
Further, might the Talmudic imprecations against Christ and
Christians have helped form the Bolshevik Jews’ anti-Christian animus? Did the
Talmud help form the “cultural framework” for the persecution of Christians, and
for the eradication of Christian culture in America today? If so, will Jews make
an effort to expunge the offending passages from the Talmud? How many rabbis
speak of their “spiritual kinship” with Christianity?
The answers to these questions are only too obvious. The Jews,
with honorable but ineffectual exceptions, judge Christians by a standard that
doesn’t seem to apply to themselves. Or rather, their single standard is “Is it
good for the Jews?”
As shepherd of
the Catholic Church, Pius XII was bound to be guided chiefly by the question “Is
it good for the Church?” He was not a Jewish leader, after all, but a Catholic
one — a somewhat neglected point in these controversies. His first duty was to
protect the Church amid the madness of a world war, knowing that its deadliest
enemy was not Nazism but Communism (which, with American assistance, conquered
several Catholic nations in Eastern Europe by the war’s end). He did what he
could to protect Jews and others too, and the most eloquent testimony to his
efforts is the conversion of Israel Zolli, chief rabbi of Rome, to Catholicism.
Zolli even took the baptismal name Eugenio in honor of Pius, who was born
Eugenio Pacelli; he would hardly have done this if he had seen Pius as
indifferent to the persecution of Jews.
Yet Wistrich complains that “in confronting the Shoah, Pius
XII’s chief concern was less with the ongoing annihilation of the Jews than with
the interests of the Church.” Think of that: a Pope putting the Church first!
Nowadays even the papacy is to be judged in terms of Jewish interests.
Self-absorption can go no further.
It’s some consolation that even the treacherous Roosevelt is
now being criticized for doing too little to save Jewish lives. Jewish critics
argue that he might have ordered the bombing of railroads leading to the
concentration camps. But the chief effect of such a practice would surely have
been to starve the camps’ inmates.
The smear of Pius XII — and of the Church — persists, and will
no doubt continue indefinitely, in the endless campaign to make Christianity and
anti-Semitism synonymous. Wistrich barely acknowledges that the diplomatic Pius
may have feared that a more explicit condemnation of Nazism would have backfired
not only against the Church, but against the Jews themselves. Besides, if papal
condemnations of Communism had failed to deter the persecution of Christians,
how could Pius expect papal animadversions against Nazism to be any more
efficacious?
Even American Jewish
groups refrained from denouncing the Shoah during the war, for fear that
speaking publicly about it might do more harm than good. This policy of silence
has resulted in bitter recriminations between American and European Jews, but it
has discouraged few Jews on either continent from blaming Pius for saying too
little.
The prevalent attitude of
Christians toward the Jews has been (and remains) not so much hatred as fear.
The Acts of the Apostles tells how the early Church was forced to take various
precautions “for fear of the Jews.” Few deny, or doubt, that this is
historically accurate; the tolerance recommended to Christians has never been a
salient trait of the Jews themselves, when they have held power. On the
contrary, the state of Israel is based on an ethnic supremacism that would be
roundly condemned as anti-Semitic if it were enforced against Jews by gentiles.
Yet most Jews hotly resent any suggestion that Zionism is “racist.” (A United
Nations declaration to that effect was eventually repealed in response to
American pressure.)
In intellectual
life, Jews have been brilliantly subversive of the cultures of the natives they
have lived amongst. Their tendencies, especially in modern times, have been
radical and nihilistic. One thinks of Marx, Freud, and many other shapers of
modern thought and authors of reductionist ideologies. Even Einstein, the
greatest of Jewish scientists, was, unlike Sir Isaac Newton, no mere
contemplator of nature’s laws; he helped inspire the development of nuclear
weapons and consistently defended the Soviet Union under Stalin.
Jews have generally supported Communism, socialism,
liberalism, and secularism; the agenda of major Jewish groups is the
de-Christianization of America, using a debased interpretation of the “living
Constitution” as their instrument. When the Jewish side of an issue is too
unpopular to prevail democratically, the legal arm of Jewry seeks to make the
issue a “constitutional” one, appealing to judicial sovereignty to decide it in
defiance of the voters. Overwhelming Jewish support for legal abortion
illustrates that many Jews hate Christian morality more than they revere Jewish
tradition itself. This fanatical antagonism causes anguish to a number of
religious, conscientious, and far-sighted Jews, but they, alas, are outside the
Jewish mainstream.
Today, in American
politics, journalism, and ecclesiastical circles, fear of Jewish power is
overwhelming. This is most obvious in the dread of incurring the label
“anti-Semitic,” in the way Christians shrink from calling this country “a
Christian nation” (a phrase that enrages Jews), and in the groveling before
Israel that has become a virtual requirement for anyone who aspires to high
office. Nobody dares to point out the obvious, that Israel is inimical to the
principles Americans profess to share; nearly everyone in public life pretends
that Israel is a model democracy and a “reliable ally” of the United States,
despite repeated episodes of Israeli spying and betrayal against its chief
benefactor. Israel has not only refused to return the documents stolen by
Jonathan Pollard; it continues to press the U.S. Government for his release from
prison. In fact Israel exemplifies most of the “anti-Semitic stereotypes” of
yore: it is exclusivist, belligerent, parasitic, amoral, and underhanded. It
feels no obligation to non-Jews, even those who have befriended
it.
Most Jews regard conversion to
Christianity as the ultimate treason to Jewry and resent Christian attempts to
convert them; never mind that for Christians, concern for the salvation of souls
is the highest charity next to the adoration of God. In Jewish eyes, such
charity is next door to persecution. Jews for Jesus, a convert group, is
especially execrated among Jews, and in Israel Christian proselytization can be
punished by law under various pretexts. (Even giving a copy of the New Testament
can be construed as a “bribe.”) Yet Christians, who may not claim a nation of
their own, are taxed to support the Jewish state.
History is replete with the lesson that a country in which the
Jews get the upper hand is in danger. Such was the experience of Europe during
Jewish-led Communist revolutions in Russia, Hungary, Romania, and Germany after
World War I. Christians knew that Communism — often called “Jewish Bolshevism” —
would bring awful persecution with the ultimate goal of the annihilation of
Christianity. While the atheistic Soviet regime made war on Christians,
murdering tens of thousands of Orthodox priests, it also showed its true colors
by making anti-Semitism a capital crime. Countless Jews around the world
remained pro-Communist even after Stalin had purged most Jews from positions of
power in the Soviet Union.
Clearly,
it is futile for the Church to try to mollify a hatred so ancient and so deep as
the Jewish animus against Christianity. Despite all the sentimental rhetoric to
the contrary — such as pious nonsense about “the Judaeo-Christian tradition” —
Judaism and Christianity are radically opposed over the most important thing of
all: Jesus Christ, who commands us to be wise as serpents and harmless as doves,
and to love our enemies, which does not mean mistaking them for
friends.
This is not to suggest that
true friendship can’t exist between Jews and Christians as individuals. And
there is much about the Jews, an immensely talented people, that a Christian can
honor and delight in. But any concord based on lies, evasions, and partisan
propaganda is false and should be rejected. We Remember is an
honorable attempt to vindicate the honor of the Church. If only it had dealt
more frankly with the real history of Jewish-Christian relations!
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