The Future of Post-Shoah Christology: Three Challenges and Three Hopes
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Genocide and Christology
2. Post-Shoah Christology
- Disavowing supersessionism,
- Promoting the dignity of the Jewish people,
- Taking responsibility for the history of Christian anti-Judaism,
- Advocating valid interpretations of the Tanach through Jewish-only lenses,
- Highlighting the ongoing viability of the Jewish covenant,
- Recognizing the value of the Jewishness of Jesus, and
- Ceasing Christian systemic attempts to convert the Jewish people (See Admirand 2016).
3. When There Are No More Survivors: Challenge One
4. Religious Pluralism: Challenge Two
- Remembering and advocating for other mass atrocities,
- Supporting salvific truths and paths in multiple religions,
- Engaging in other types of interfaith dialogues,
- Opening up the Jewish–Christian dialogue to those of other faiths (usually Islam),
- The growth of those who ascribe to a multi-religious or blended faith,
- The rise of the nones who seem to have little institutional loyalty, belief, or firm religious identity,
- The spread of atheism in the West, or a pervasive God and religion indifference, especially among the young.
- What about the gulags, laogai, Cambodian killing fields, Syria, the wars in the Democratic Republic of Congo? What about the millions of poor and malnourished, stuck in slums and ghettos? What about refugees and migrants, dying at our borders and in our seas?
- The more urgent issue is Islam, especially after 9/11 and the ongoing rise and threat of Islamic fundamentalism.
- Many scholars believe the future of Christianity (especially in terms of numbers) will be in the Global South, especially Africa, where limited contact with living Judaism (but growing tension with Islam), raises its own problems. In such contexts, other mass atrocities (like the Rwandan Genocide) also seem a more pressing and relevant. theological and moral challenge. What, again, becomes of a post-Shoah Christology?
- There is no one way: people can believe what they do as long as they do not harm anyone. Judaism is meaningful for you, while I find holiness through Christianity, perhaps even in some combination.
- Jewish–Christian dialogue, like the Christian ecumenical movement, has gone as far as it can right now. Deeper possibilities and new interfaith territory are found in other faiths like Buddhism. Emily Sigalow, in American JewBu, for example, notes younger Jewish interest in Buddhism as a religion because it is clearly different from Judaism (as well as Christianity and Islam), with little (negative) history with Jewish lives and well-being (Sigalow 2019, p. 172).
- “I am not a practicing Jew.” “I was raised Catholic, but I don’t really follow that anymore.”
- What about the Palestinian people and how they are treated by the State of Israel?17 How can you support the Church with its views on women or especially after the child abuse atrocities committed, abetted, and silenced by clerics?
5. The Shoah and Other Atrocities
6. Religious Pluralism and a Post-Shoah Christology
7. Amnesia, Denial, Indifference: Challenge Three
8. Conclusions: Three Hopes for Post-Shoah Christology
- Ongoing repentance and humility (Matt 3:2 and Matt 5:5) by expressing clear Church responsibility for past and present institutional moral failures.
- Such would include a revision and update of “We Remember—A Reflection on the Shoah,” outlining specifically the moral failures of the Church towards the Jewish people before and during the Shoah (and so not separating the sacramental status/role of the Church as the Body of Christ with the immoral actions of certain Christians).
- Commitment to deeper interreligious listening and learning (Mark 7:24–30), and thus, minimally, a movement towards religious pluralism.
- This hope entails an expansive update of Nostra Aetate, emphasizing Christianity’s learning from Judaism and the meaning of God’s ongoing covenant with the Jewish people (in the context of this article) and deeper inclusion of the value of other world faiths and Indigenous religions. Note that updating and rebuking Church documents countering these attempts should also be undertaken, including contemporary documents like Dominus Iesus.
- Incorporating testimonies of victims of the Shoah and other mass atrocities within Church masses, catechesis, and theological and seminary classes.
- Here I follow Rabbi Anson Laynter’s highlighting of Jewish theological protest within Jewish liturgy (See Laytner 2019). Such protest would also align with prioritizing the Franciscan view of the Atonement (See Admirand 2008, pp. 302–17) (Jesus came purely from love, even as such love often leads to the cross because of the sinfulness of the world). This view of the Incarnation would not only purify and fortify a post-Shoah Christology but Jewish–Christian relations and the Christian hope for salvation through other holy paths.23
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | I thank Phil Cunningham for reminding me to go beyond “merely a guilt driven response for Christian engagement with Jews to the Shoah.” Motivation instead should come from Christian witness of following Christ that leads to relationship with the Jewish people and facing the horrors of the Shoah. Cunningham notes this more lasting motivation in analysis (with Adam Gregerman) of recent (and controversial) writings of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI. See (Cunningham and Gregerman 2019). |
2 | For my analysis of the types, limits, and strengths of religious pluralism, see (Admirand 2019, chp. 3). See also (Thatamanil 2020). |
3 | The field of interreligious studies (and related groups or subgroup) is ever-expanding, but see for example, (Gustafson 2020). On the expansion and diversification of interreligious dialogue, see (Cornille 2013). For a recent key text embracing religious pluralism (as echoed in nature) through interreligious theology, see (Schmidt-Leukel 2017); and for a helpful edited collection analyzing the text (with Schmidt-Leukel’s response), see (Race and Knitter 2019). |
4 | Confer, especially, the writing of James Baldwin on White silence, forgetfulness, denial, and amnesia towards mistreatment, social injustice, and structural racism in American society. I write on these themes in (Admirand 2019, chp. 6). |
5 | I thank Phil Cunningham for helping me formulate this preamble. |
6 | (Boys 2000, p. 73). See also Didier Pollefeyt’s collection of essays and reflections on theology and the Shoah, especially his classic essay (Pollefeyt 2018, pp. 255–77); and (Meyer 2020, pp. 102–3). |
7 | Marianne Moyaert writes: “In light of the tragedy of the Holocaust, Christian theology has an ethical responsibility to re-examine its Christology.” See Marianne Moyaert, “Who is the Suffering Servant? A Comparative Theological Reading of Isaiah 53 after the Shoah.” In (Moyaert 2016, pp. 216–37). |
8 | Initially, some liberation theological texts were rebuked for supersessionist understanding. Note that much of my work draws on both liberation and post-Shoah theology. See (Admirand 2012c, chps. 6–9; Admirand 2018, pp. 156–69). |
9 | In a recent article, Didier Pollefeyt, for example, has argued that despite recent gains in Jewish–Christian dialogue, “the Catholic Church does not have a clear and consistent theology of Judaism” which can uphold the unrevoked Jewish covenant with God and the “unique and universal meaning of Christ.” See (Pollefeyt 2020, pp. 483–98). |
10 | See especially Metz’s essays (Metz 1995a, pp. 38–48; Metz 1995b, pp. 3–16). See also (Manemann 2001, pp. 775–87). |
11 | A foundational text is (Pawlikowski 1982, pp. 136–47). See also (Pawlikowski 2007, pp. 147–67). |
12 | Though resembling the Christian heresy of adoptionism, Kogan’s attempt also resonates with the Orthodox Christian belief of theosis. See (Kogan 2018, pp. 73–93). For my assessment of Jewish critiques of Christology, see (Admirand 2016, pp. 81–96). |
13 | Writing in 2004, (Phan 2004, p. 162). |
14 | See, for example, (Burger 2019, p. 269). For my account of witness testimonies and their indispensable role for theology and theodicy, see (Admirand 2012c, chp 3). |
15 | USC Shoah Foundation. Homepage. https://sfi.usc.edu/dit, accessed on 15 May 2021. For evaluation of “German-speaking digital interactive Holocaust testimony,” see (Kolb 2021, pp. 63–82). See also (Fishbane 2020). |
16 | See, for example, (Taylor 2007) and my analysis of the secular and secularities in (Admirand 2019, chp. 5). |
17 | Regarding the Land of Israel in the context of Jewish–Christian dialogue, see (Cunningham et al. 2020). This is a convenient place to add, though the present article does not allow me to develop this adequately, that Christian Palestinian voices are also needed to further nuance (and complicate) my claims about the need for a post-Shoah Christology. |
18 | Gretton, I You We Them, pp. 541–601. See also (Lindqvist 2007). |
19 | For my account of the mixed biblical legacy of children in the Gospels, see (Admirand 2012a, pp. 187–95). |
20 | “A new relationship between Jews and Christians will not weaken Jewish practice.” (Dabru Emet 2000). |
21 | For an account of the Kindertransport, see, for example, (Craig-Norton 2019). Eva’s talk can be accessed via Youtube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bfReG66mCNA, accessed on 15 May 2021. |
22 | Gretton, I You We Them, p. 606. Grass’s words are from an interview in the Guardian in March 2003. |
23 | An initial draft of this article had included a comment (in the context of the Incarnation) against a God demanding blood or sacrifice. An anonymous reviewer rightly reminded me of the old anti-Christian trope disconnecting the God of Christianity with the God of the Tanakh, whose worship included the ritual of Temple sacrifice. The reviewer helpfully recommended (Halbertal 2015), noting Halbertal “points out that the sacrifices (Hebrew qorbanot) were meant to bring people closer to God (and ‘to be close’ is the root meaning of Q-R-B).” Regarding Jesus and Temple Sacrifice, I remain somewhat ambivalent. I note how Mary and Joseph offered sacrifice at the Temple during Jesus’ Presentation (Luke 2:22–24), a young Jesus taught there (Luke 2:46), and an older Jesus (before his arrest) noted he often preached in the Temple (Matt 26:55). Most pertinent is the cleansing of the Temple, principally against the money lenders (Mark 11:15–19 and John 2:13–16), but note how he also drove out the “sheep and oxen” from the Temple (John 2:15). What happened to those animals after this incident? |
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Admirand, P. The Future of Post-Shoah Christology: Three Challenges and Three Hopes. Religions 2021, 12, 407. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060407
Admirand P. The Future of Post-Shoah Christology: Three Challenges and Three Hopes. Religions. 2021; 12(6):407. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060407
Chicago/Turabian StyleAdmirand, Peter. 2021. "The Future of Post-Shoah Christology: Three Challenges and Three Hopes" Religions 12, no. 6: 407. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060407
APA StyleAdmirand, P. (2021). The Future of Post-Shoah Christology: Three Challenges and Three Hopes. Religions, 12(6), 407. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12060407