Healing the Schism (Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology)
eBook - ePub

Healing the Schism (Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology)

Karl Barth, Franz Rosenzweig, and the New Jewish-Christian Encounter

  1. 288 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Healing the Schism (Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology)

Karl Barth, Franz Rosenzweig, and the New Jewish-Christian Encounter

Frequently asked questions

Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
  • Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
  • Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
Both plans are available with monthly, semester, or annual billing cycles.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere — even offline. Perfect for commutes or when you’re on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Healing the Schism (Studies in Historical and Systematic Theology) by Jennifer M. Rosner in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Teologia e religione & Teologia cristiana. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

INTRODUCTION
THE ELECTION OF ISRAEL AND CHRISTIAN THEOLOGY
In an article entitled “Salvation Is from the Jews,” the late Richard John Neuhaus wrote the following with regard to Jewish-Christian dialogue: “I suggest that we would not be wrong to believe that this dialogue, so closely linked to the American experience, is an essential part of the unfolding of the story of the world.”1 The rivalrous and troubled tale of these two religious communities has been a constant thread in the history of the West, and the tumultuous events of the twentieth century have yielded a new chapter in the relationship between Christians and Jews. The burgeoning of this new relationship holds great promise for healing, reconciliation and redemptive partnership, and its full impact is still being played out. While we cannot be sure where this new trajectory will lead, we can point to the key events that provoked it and explore the ways in which Christians and Jews are responding to and engaging in it.
Scott Bader-Saye points to two “seismic events” in the twentieth century that shattered old models and paved the way for new ones. First, he describes the “demise of the Christendom paradigm, in which the church was positioned as the spiritual sponsor of Western civilization.” Amidst an increasingly globalized society, Christianity has become merely one world religion among many. Second, Bader-Saye points to the Holocaust, “the systematic attempt by a ‘Christian nation’ to eradicate the Jews.”2 In 1980, it was estimated that by the end of the twentieth century, more would have been written about the Holocaust than about any other subject in human history.3 The Holocaust brought the plight of the Jewish people onto the center stage of world history, and Christians’ eyes were opened to the dark streak of supersessionism and anti-Judaism that runs through Christian history.
To Bader-Saye’s list of two seismic events, we must add two more. The creation of the modern state of Israel holds inestimable significance, and Jewish liturgy hails this event as the “first flowering of our redemption.”4 Questions about the theological significance of this political event abound, and Christians have found it “difficult, if not impossible, to see Israel as just another nation.”5 Finally, the latter half of the twentieth century saw the emergence of the Messianic Jewish movement, a development that has posed a significant challenge to the regnant understanding of the relationship between Judaism and Christianity. Messianic Jews refuse to accept a mutually exclusive construal of these two religious traditions, and their communities tangibly embody this posture.
These four factors have contributed to a widespread reassessment of the relationship between Christianity and Judaism, and the effects of this shift continue to ripple outward. The post-Holocaust era has seen a number of significant official Christian statements that chart a new way of relating to Judaism and the Jewish people,6 and prevailing trends in biblical scholarship mirror this development.7 The Jewish world has recognized that the Christian reassessment of Judaism requires a response, and this response has likewise come in a variety of forms.8 These developments represent a new kind of Jewish-Christian encounter, made possible by Christians increasingly recognizing and renouncing the supersessionism that has plagued Christian history, and Jews increasingly acknowledging that Christian theology is not inherently anti-Jewish.
While these various trends are far too diverse and multifaceted to adequately treat in one study, our purpose in the pages that follow is to explore and assess one individual thread in the fabric of this twentieth-century reappraisal between Christians and Jews. In particular, this study approaches these developments from a theological and doctrinal perspective, focusing specifically upon the Christological and ecclesiological revisions that have accompanied and provoked this widespread reassessment. We will begin by explicating a key doctrinal question posed by Catholic theologian Bruce Marshall, whose lucid and theologically rigorous approach will frame the entirety of this study. Through the lens of Marshall’s question, each chapter will assess a key twentieth- or twenty-first century theologian (and, in the case of chapter 3, a group of theologians) who has significantly contributed to the theological reenvisioning of the relationship between Judaism and Christianity. Our goal will be, in essence, to retrace some of the key moments in the recasting of Christology and ecclesiology in light of Israel and point the way forward toward potential future directions in this unfolding intellectual trajectory.
The purpose of the present chapter is to lay the framework that will guide our study. After reviewing Marshall’s perspective and setting up the key question that will govern our approach, we will further establish one of the theological mainstays of Marshall’s criteria, namely the ongoing connection between the Jewish people and Jewish practice. We will then delineate the scope of this study by defining the “new Jewish-Christian encounter” and provide an overview of what is to follow.
MARSHALL’S CHALLENGE
While Bruce Marshall has not (yet) written a complete work on the question of Israel and the church, he has treated this topic in a number of articles and chapters in books.9 As we will see, his cogent approach prioritizes both a restructuring of traditional theological loci as well as an adherence to orthodox Christian doctrine. Marshall’s desire to see the tradition reworked within the bounds of orthodoxy provides the framework for this study.
A CHRISTIAN AFFIRMATION OF THE ELECTION OF ISRAEL
According to Marshall, the widespread reconception of the relationship between Judaism and Christianity has, from the Christian side, hinged upon one particularly significant fulcrum. In his words, “The theological point of departure for our century’s critical reassessment of the church’s relation to the Jewish people is the proposal, now commonly made, that Christians ought to share a wider range of beliefs with Jews than they have in the past, and one belief in particular: that the biological descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are permanently and irrevocably the elect people of God.”10 Part and parcel of this affirmation is a repudiation of the long-held Christian belief that the church has replaced Israel as God’s elect. This, for Marshall, is the very definition of supersessionism. In order to renounce the supersessionist claims that have so perniciously clung to Christian theology, the church must come to share in the belief of Israel’s permanent election. According to Marshall, such an affirmation entails upholding “at least” the following elements:11
1.The elect people of Israel are the biological (“according to the flesh,” as Rom 9:3 states) descendants of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
2.As such, a distinction between this biological family and all other peoples of the earth is presupposed.12
3.This biological family receives God’s favor as his “treasured possession” (Deut 10:14), not because of anything they have done but because of God’s choice.
4.To this people belong both the promise that they themselves will be blessed by God and that through them God’s blessing will come to all peoples on earth.
5.This elect people has special responsibilities toward God, namely to observe Torah, which is incumbent upon them alone.
As Marshall explains, the first two principles describe who the elect people are and the following three describe the content and consequences of their election.13 In these five principles, Marshall is driving toward a larger point that is seldom recognized by Christians, namely the connection between the election of the Jewish people and the practice of Judaism. According to Marshall, theologians who seek to avoid supersessionism must affirm God’s ongoing election of Israel and Israel’s unique covenantal obligations.
Before addressing this point directly, it is important that we expand further on the second affirmation in Marshall’s list, namely that a distinction between the Jewish people and all other peoples on earth is “presupposed.”14 That the Jewish people be identifiable as a unique people is an essential element of their election. In Marshall’s words, “visible distinction from the nations is … necessary for the election of Israel; it is among the constituent or integral parts of the existence of the Jewish people as God’s chosen.”15 According to Marshall, Israel’s election “would be void if the biological descendants of Abraham indeed received God’s promised blessing, but had ceased to be identifiable as Abraham’s descendants, that is, as Jews. The permanence of Israel’s election thus entails the permanence of the distinction between Jew and Gentile.”16
Marshall contends that the incarnation is the final safeguard that this distinction will always remain. Jesus’ Jewishness and membership in the people of Israel is irreducibly constitutive of his identity. By virtue of God taking on Jewish flesh in the person of Jesus, “God’s ownership of this Jewish flesh is permanent. In the end, when all flesh shall see the glory of the Lord, the vision of God will, so the traditional Christian teaching goes, be bound up ineluctably with the vision of this Jew seated at God’s right hand.”17 Because Jesus’ Jewish identity is only meaningful within the context of the Jewish people as a whole, “in owning with unsurpassable intimacy the particular Jewish flesh of Jesus, God also owns the Jewish people as a whole, precisely in their distinction from … Gentiles; he cannot own one without also owning the other.”18 The incarnation of God in Jesus is the concentration and intensification of the indwelling of God in the Jewish people collectively.19 God’s singling out of this particular people (and this particular man) as his dwelling place in the world makes explicit the distinction of the Jewish people from the rest of the nations.20
“How then,” Marshall asks, “is the distinct identity of the Jews, and so Israel’s election, to be maintained?”21 In his words, “the obvious answer is by Jewish observance of the full range of traditional Jewish law (halachah, which embraces both the written and oral Torah, that is, both biblical and rabbinic law—see Marshall’s point 5, above). This observance, in which the Gentiles will surely have no interest and to which God’s electing will does not obligate them, will be the chief means by which Abraham’s descendants can be identified.”22 This leads us back to Marshall’s key observation that affirming Israel’s permanent election is inseparable from affirming the ongoing practice of Judaism.
Marshall makes this connection explicit in his assessment of Pope John Paul II’s contribution to the conversation. While it is possible to affirm the election of the Jewish people without affirming the ongoing practice of Judaism—and vice versa—John Paul II is notable for maintaining a high regard for both. Speaking at the Chief Synagogue in Rome in 1986, the pope invoked the words of Nostra Aetate: “The Church of Christ discovers her ‘bond’ with Judaism by ‘searching into her own mystery.’ ” According to the pope’s interpretation, this statement implies that “the Jewish religion is not ‘extrinsic’ to us, but in a certain way is ‘intrinsic’ to our own religion. With Judaism, therefore, we have a relationship which we do not have with any other religion.” Thus the pope declared to the Jews in Rome, “You are our dearly beloved brothers and, in a certain way, it could be said that you are our elder brothers.”23
In light of the special bond that exists between Jews and Christians, John Paul II contends that Christian self-understanding must take into account not only the Jewish people, but the Jewish religion as well. In Marshall’s words, “If another religion is intrinsic to our own identity, then we can only understand the import of our own beliefs—we can only grasp whom we ourselves are—by coming to know and appreciate the beliefs, the religion, of another community. When we say this about the relationship of the Church to Judaism, we are pinning down our own identity, in some irreducible way, on a community which is, as the pope goes on to say, clearly distinct from our own, and one whose beliefs are in some very important ways opposed to our own.”24
Significantly, that the pope’s words were addressed to the Jews in Rome affirms that their physical descent from Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob makes them the referents of God’s enduring covenant with Israel: “Not only is faithful Israel before Christ the root from which the gentiles live in Christ, but faithful Israel now, the Jews gathered with their chief rabbi in the Great Synagogue of Rome, are the root from which the gentile Church now lives in Christ.”25 The coming of Christ reinforces rather than diminishes the Jewish people’s unique covenant with God, a covenant that necessarily undergirds and informs the church’s identity.
While the pope’s words make a strong claim with regard to Christianity’s self-understanding, they also make an important point about Jewish existence. The pope recognizes the integral connection between Jewish identity and the practice of Judaism, namely that the former ultimately depends on the latter. As Marshall rightly explains, “The Jewish people cannot continue to exist in the long run without Judaism.… The irrevocable election of the Jewish people evidently requires the permanence of their religion … Without Judaism, the Jewish people would surely, if slowly, disappear from the earth, as other ancient people have done. They would cease to be a distinct people, and vanish into gentilitas, as medieval Christian theologians called the mass of us not descended from Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.”26
Marshall brings to the fore the reality that the election of the Jewish people cannot be affirmed and upheld without also affirming the ongoi...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Introduction: The Election of Israel and Christian Theology
  7. Chapter 1: “Salvation Is of the Jews”: Karl Barth’s Doctrine of Israel and the Church
  8. Chapter 2: “The Sprouting of Our Redemption”: Franz Rosenzweig’s Theology of Judaism and Christianity
  9. Chapter 3: “Torah Shall Go Forth from Zion”: Reconceiving Christology and Ecclesiology in Light of Israel
  10. Chapter 4: Hastening toward the “Day that Is Entirely Shabbat”: Mark Kinzer’s Messianic Jewish Theology
  11. Conclusion: Where Do We Go from Here?
  12. Appendix 1: The Jewish People’s Relationship to Land, Language, and Law in Rosenzweig’s Thought
  13. Appendix 2(A): Marc Chagall’s White Crucifixion
  14. Appendix 2(B): Marc Chagall’s Exodus
  15. Bibliography
  16. Scripture Index
  17. Subject Index