Cardinal Koch: 50 Years of Errors and Heresies in the Jewish-Christian Dialogue

Conversion

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R. Sungenis: Because Canon 212, 2-3 allows the Catholic layman to offer his concerns to the pastors of the Church, I take this opportunity to make critical comments on Cardinal Koch’s speech. Briefly, it is my considered opinion that Cardinal Koch’s speech contains a number of erroneous concepts and conclusions, and some I would judge as being heretical.

 

Cardinal Koch: "Have Christians and Jews today the will and the strength for conciliation and reconciliation?"

 

ROME, MAY 18, 2012 (Zenit.org).- Here is the text of an address given by Cardinal Kurt Koch, president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity and of the Commission for Religious Relations With the Jews, on Wednesday. He was speaking at a conference hosted by the Pontifical Angelicum University in collaboration with the John Paul II Center for Interreligious Dialogue, directed by Rabbi Jack Bemporad. His address was the fifth "Berrie Lecture," a series promoted by the Russel Berrie Foundation of New York.

 

Building on “Nostra aetate”: 50 Years of Christian–Jewish Dialogue[1]

 

Kurt Cardinal Koch

 

I am honoured to be here today to present the John Paul II Lecture on Interreligious Understanding, the fifth in a series of prestigious annual lectures organised by the John Paul II Center for Interreligious Dialogue held at the Angelicum University. In a special way, this University is committed to fostering ecumenical and interreligious dialogue at the academic level. The John Paul II Center is a partnership between the Angelicum and the Russell Berrie Foundation, and I am very pleased to acknowledge the presence of Angelica Berrie, President of the Foundation, whose name seems to reflect the joint aspirations that motivated the creation of the Center. I would like also to mention in this context the Russell Berrie Fellowship Program, which aims to develop the exchange of insights and the bonds of friendship and mutual understanding that we hope will resonate well beyond the academic environment. The focus of this presentation will be the historical developments in the Jewish–Catholic dialogue made possible by the Conciliar document “Nostra aetate”.

 

1. “Nostra Aetate”: YES to our Jewish roots, NO to anti–Semitism

 

On the Catholic side, the Declaration of the Second Vatican Council on the relationship of the church to the non–Christian religions, “Nostra aetate”, can be considered the beginning of a systematic dialogue with the Jews. Still today it is considered the “foundation document” and the “Magna Charta” of the dialogue of the Roman Catholic Church with Judaism, so my tour d’horizon of the Jewish–Catholic conversation must begin there. It did not develop in a vacuum, since on the Christian side there had already been approaches to Judaism both within and outside the Catholic Church before the Council. But after the unprecedented crime of the Shoah above all, an effort was made in the post–War period towards a theologically reflected re–definition of the relationship with Judaism. Following the mass murder of the European Jews planned and executed by the National Socialists with industrial perfection, a profound examination of conscience was initiated about how such a barbaric scenario was possible in the Christian–oriented West. Must we assume that anti–Jewish tendencies present within Christianity for centuries were complicit in the anti–Semitism of the Nazis, racially motivated and led astray by a godless and neo–pagan ideology, or simply allowing it to run its course? Among Christians too there were both perpetrators and victims; but the broad masses surely consisted of passive spectators who kept their eyes closed in the face of this brutal reality. The Shoah therefore became a question and an accusation against Christianity: Why did Christian resistance against the boundless brutality of the Nazi crimes not demonstrate that measure and that clarity which one should rightfully have expected? Have Christians and Jews today the will and the strength for conciliation and reconciliation on the common foundation of faith in the one and only God of Israel? What significance does Judaism have in the future for churches and ecclesial communities, and in what theological relationship do we stand today in connection with Judaism?

 

R. Sungenis: Immediately we see the confusion created by Cardinal Koch’s choice of words. Once the New Testament appears in history, references cannot be used in Catholic/Jewish relations that conveniently leave out the person of Jesus Christ. Obviously, if the Cardinal had said, “reconciliation on the common foundation of faith in the one and only Jesus Christ, the Son of God,” then all such “reconciliation” would cease immediately. Hence, today’s prelature, unlike 1960 years of Catholic tradition before them, is using a fallacious premise for it relations with the Jews. As such, it is basically a lie and will not be blessed by God. This is the very reason that virtually no progress has been made with the Jews, except that today’s Catholic prelature has found itself retreating more and more from traditional doctrines in order to accommodate an increasingly uncompromising Jewish religion.


Cardinal Koch: Soon after the end of the Second World War, the Christian side confronted the phenomenon of anti–Semitism at the International Emergency Conference on Anti–Semitism which took place at Seelisberg from 30 July to 5 August 1947. About 65 persons, Jews and Christians from various denominations, met for wide–ranging reflection on how anti–Semitism could be eradicated at its roots. The meeting at Seelisberg aimed at laying a new foundation for the dialogue between Jews and Christians, and giving a stimulus towards mutual understanding. The perspectives which have become known as the “Ten Points of Seelisberg” have over time become path–breaking, and in one way or another found their way into the Council declaration “Nostra aetate”, even though in this text a decidedly theological framework was given to the relationship with Judaism. This declaration in fact begins with a reflection on the mystery of the church and a reminder of the deep bond which links the people of the New Covenant with the tribe of Abraham in a spiritual way.

 

R. Sungenis: But the “deep bond” is not with the Jewish people at large but between the faithful Jews who followed in the footsteps of Abraham’s faith since only they foresaw and accepted Jesus Christ (cf. Rom 4:1-22; John 8:56; Heb 11:26; 1 Pet 1:10-11, 20-21). The majority of Old Testament Jews did not have or even want Abraham’s faith, and it is the very reason God rejected the Jewish nation at the death of Christ. Today’s prelature has continually made the error that there is something special about being Jewish, but that is an illusion.

 

Cardinal Koch: “Nostra aetate” and the “Ten Points of Seelisberg” both emphasise that the disdain, disparagement and contempt of Judaism must be avoided at all costs, and therefore the Jewish roots of Christianity are explicitly given prominence.

 

R. Sungenis: The issue is not about the “disdain” of Judaism. The issue is what Judaism believes that will necessarily cause the Christian to be wary of having a relationship with someone who does not accept Jesus Christ as God and Savior. It was the very reason that Jesus Christ himself could not have a close relationship with the Jews. Since Jews did not accept Christ, neither will they accept Christians. Unfortunately, not one word about this problem is mentioned by Cardinal Koch in his entire speech. Trying to alleviate this problem by giving prominence to the Jewish roots of Christianity is a misunderstanding of the problem.

 

Cardinal Koch: At the same time the two declarations converge – each naturally in a different way – in rejecting the accusation which has unfortunately survived over centuries in various places, that the Jews were “deicides”.


R. Sungenis: Once again, the Cardinal creates confusion by his choice of words. The Catholic Church has never officially designated Jews as “deicides.” Unfortunately, the undercurrent in Cardinal Koch’s speech is that the Catholic Church prior to 1965 had aberrant doctrine concerning the Jews and only with Nostra Aetate did the Church finally reach the correct understanding. But the Church has always taught officially that not all Jews wanted to see Christ die. If Cardinal Koch believes otherwise, then the burden of proof is on him to show there is an official contradiction in Catholic teaching.

 

Cardinal Koch: In the Christian sphere, coming to terms with the Shoah is certainly one of the major motivations leading to the drafting of “Nostra aetate”. But other reasons can surely also be identified: Within Catholic theology following the appearance of the encyclical “Divino afflante spiritu” by Pope Pius XII in 1943, biblical studies were opened up – though with cautious beginners’ steps – to historical–critical biblical interpretation, which implies that one began to read the biblical texts in their historic context and within the religious traditions prevailing in their time.

 

R. Sungenis: Again, the Cardinal gives the impression that traditional Catholic exegesis of Scripture ignored historical contexts and religious traditions. It did not; rather, it didn’t put the same emphasis on those two dimensions as modern exegetes do. But modern exegetes often ‘read into’ the historical texts and religious history their own cultural or doctrinal preferences. This often happens when modern exegetes try to impose modern ecumenism into Scripture.

 

Cardinal Koch: This process ultimately found its doctrinal expression in the Conciliar decree on divine revelation “Dei verbum”, or more precisely in the instruction that the exegete should carefully research what the authors of the biblical texts really intended to say: “Those who search out the intentions of the sacred writers must among other things have regard for literary forms. For truth is proposed and expressed in a variety of ways, depending on whether a text is history of one kind or another, or whether its form is that of prophecy, poetry or some other form of speech.”[2]

 

R. Sungenis: The problem is that the modern exegete assumes he knows what the “intent” of the biblical author is but, as is usually the case, he merely reads back into the biblical author what he has concluded from his modern perspective. For example, if the modern exegete believes in evolution, he will conclude that the author of Genesis did not “intend” to give us a literal six day creation story. If the modern exegete does not believe in talking serpents, he will conclude that the “intent” of the Genesis author was not to give us a literal account in the Garden of Eden. The correct way to handle this is the way Pius XII taught: the “intent” of the author is known by reading his words literally.

 

Cardinal Koch: The precise observation of historical religious traditions reflected in the texts of sacred scripture had as a consequence that the figure of Jesus of Nazareth was located ever more clearly within the Judaism of his time. In this way the New Testament was placed entirely within the framework of Jewish traditions, and Jesus was perceived as a Jew of his time who felt an obligation to these traditions. This view also found its way into the Council declaration “Nostra aetate”, when it states with reference to the Letter to the Romans (9:5), that “Jesus stems according to the flesh from the people of Israel, and the church recalls the fact that the apostles, her foundation stones and pillars, sprang from the Jewish people, as well as most of the early disciples who proclaimed Christ to the world.”[3] Since “Nostra aetate” it has therefore become part of the cantus firmus of Jewish–Christian dialogue to call to mind and to emphasise the Jewish roots of the Christian faith. During his visit to the Roman synagogue on 13 April 1986 Pope John Paul II expressed this in the vivid and impressive words: “The Jewish religion is not something ‘extrinsic’ to us but in a certain way is ‘intrinsic’ to our own religion. With Judaism we therefore have a relationship we do not have with any other religion. You are our dearly beloved brothers and in a certain way it could be said, our elder brothers.”[4]

 

R. Sungenis: The problem is that generalizations and metaphors like these are used without being defined. They give impressions but no real truth. What is an “elder brother” in this context? How is the Jewish religion “intrinsic” to Christianity, especially since Judaism doesn’t believe in Jesus Christ who is the essence of Christianity? In a word, the essence of Judaism is a categorical rejection of Jesus Christ; but Christianity is defined by the person of Jesus Christ. The two religions couldn’t be more diametrically opposed.


Cardinal Koch: However, it was not only theological insights which led the Christian side to seek theoretical and practical rapprochement with Judaism. In fact, political and pragmatic reasons also played a not inconsequential role in this. Since the foundation of the State of Israel in 1948, the Catholic Church sees itself confronted in the Holy Land with the reality that it has to develop its pastoral life within a state which decidedly understands itself as Jewish. Israel is the only land in the world with a majority Jewish population, and for that reason alone the Christians living there must necessarily engage in dialogue with them. In this regard the Holy See has consistently pursued two goals, that is enabling on the one hand unhindered pastoral activity of the Catholic congregations in the Holy Land, and on the other, free access to the sacred sites of Christians for Christian pilgrims. That requires in the first instance political dialogue with the ruling executive of the State of Israel, which from the Jewish perspective must naturally always be embedded in a dialogue with the religious authorities of Judaism. Christians seem to be rather inclined to differentiate and delimit political and religious affairs from one another, while Judaism strives to converge and integrate the two dimensions.


Whatever motives and factors may have individually led to the drafting of “Nostra aetate”, the declaration remains the crucial compass of all endeavours towards Jewish–Catholic dialogue, and after 47 years we can claim with gratitude that this theological re–definition of the relationship with Judaism has directly brought forth rich fruits throughout its reception history.

 

R. Sungenis: Again, the Cardinal is implying that Nostra Aetate is new Catholic doctrine and that it broke with previous Catholic doctrine. It did no such thing. Nostra Aetate is merely a reiteration, in modern terms, of what the Church has officially taught in her tradition.

 

Cardinal Koch: It seems that as far as content is concerned the Council fathers at that time took into consideration almost everything which has since proved to be significant in the history of the dialogue. On the Jewish side it is particularly positively emphasised that the Conciliar Declaration took up an unambiguous position against every form of anti–Semitism. It is not least on that basis that the Jews are and remain borne up by the hope that they can rest assured that in the Catholic Church they have a reliable ally in the struggle against anti–Semitism.

 

R. Sungenis: The Catholic Church has always been against anti-semitism. For Cardinal Koch to make it appear as if the traditional Catholic Church officially taught anti-semitism is an egregious assault on the Catholic faith. In order to promote no anti-semitism it seems as if the Cardinal succumbs to anti-Catholicism by disdaining or disparaging what he caricatures as the Church’s traditional teaching. Many decades prior to Nostra Aetate the Decree of the Holy Office of March 25, 1928 stated that Catholic Church “condemns hatred against the people formerly chosen by God, that hatred that ordinarily goes by the name of Antisemitism.” Notice also that the Decree designates the Jews as “the people formerly chosen by God,” and not as is often cited today, “the chosen people of God.”


Cardinal Koch: With regard to the reception history of Conciliar documents, one can without doubt dare to assert that “Nostra aetate” is to be reckoned among those Council texts which have in a convincing manner been able to effect a fundamental re–orientation of the Catholic Church following the Council.

 

R. Sungenis: Is this what really happened, or is it the case that Nostra Aetate was made to say all kinds of “ecumenical” things it never said or even implied? Cardinal Koch himself admits later in this speech that Nostra Aetate has been commonly made to say that the Jews still have a covenant with God but that this is wrong for it says nothing of the kind. He is to be commended for pointing that out. Unfortunately, Nostra Aetate is one of the most abused documents in the history of the Catholic Church. Both Jews and Catholics, many who envision some kind of spiritual status or future for the Jewish race, have read all kinds of fallacious things into Nostra Aetate.

 

Cardinal Koch: This of course only becomes clear to us when we consider that previously there was in part a great reluctance regarding contacts between Jews and Catholics, arising in part from the history of Christianity with its discrimination against Jews extending even to forced conversions. The fundamental principle of respect for Judaism expressed in “Nostra aetate” has over the course of recent decades made it possible for groups who initially confronted one another with scepticism to step by step become reliable partners and even good friends, capable of coping with crises together and overcoming conflicts positively.

 

R. Sungenis: Again, the Cardinal seems to see no problem in disdaining and disparaging the traditional Catholic Church at the same time he stated earlier that “the disdain, disparagement and contempt of Judaism must be avoided at all costs.” The Cardinal fails to mention even one instance in the history of Judaism, whether BC or AD, in which it and its people have done things against Christianity and of which previous popes and councils had to take measures. As for “forced conversions,” this was never official Catholic doctrine. In fact, it was quite the opposite. For example the Apostolic Constitution, Licet Perfidia Judaeorum, of Pope Innocent III in 1199 AD, solemnly stated: “The Christian must not exterminate or oppress them [the Jews]…We must not molest them in the exercise of the privileges accorded them…As they seek our help, we accept and take them under our protection; and following our predecessors Callixtus, Eugenius, Alexander, Clement and Celestine, we forbid the forcing of baptism on a Jew, also harming them in any way or taking their goods, etc., or violating their cemeteries and digging up corpses to find money. The punishment for disobedience to these dispositions is excommunication.”


Cardinal Koch: 2. Other Vatican documents as follow–ups of “Nostra aetate”

 

The dialogue endeavours which developed gradually after the Council were entrusted in the Roman Curia to the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity, for the understandable reason that the leader of this Secretariat, the German Curia Cardinal Augustin Bea, had in the year 1960 – before the Council – been commissioned by Pope John XXIII to prepare with his staff a draft for a Council document dealing with the new relationship of the Catholic Church with Judaism.[5] As is well known, this project led to the Council Declaration “Nostra aetate”, which of course focussed on the relationship of the Church with all non–Christian religions. This means that Article 4 of “Nostra aetate”, which deals with relations with Judaism, forms both the starting–point and the heart of this Declaration. Towards the end of the Council, a special secretariat was formed for inter–religious dialogue, with the task of promoting relations with Islam, Hinduism and Buddhism and other non–Christian religions, so that today in the Roman Curia there is a Pontifical Council for Inter–religious Dialogue, and within the Council for Promoting Christian Unity a Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews. While this special Commission, which was founded by Pope Paul VI on 22 October 1974, is organisationally aligned with the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, it is structurally independent and entrusted with the task of accompanying and promoting the religious dialogue with Judaism.[6] This structure is in general positively assessed by the Jewish dialogue partners. It also makes good sense from a theological point of view to combine this Commission with the Council for Promoting Christian Unity, since the separation of Church and Synagogue can be considered the first schism in the history of the church,

 

R. Sungenis: A “schism” is when someone departs from the Catholic Church, but those in Jewish synagogues were never part of the Catholic Church in order to go into schism.

 

Cardinal Koch: or as the Catholic theologian Erich Przywara has called it, the “primal rift”, from which he derives the later progressive loss of wholeness of the Catholica: “The rift between the Eastern and the Western church, the rift between the Roman church and the pluriversum of the Reformation (the countless churches and sects) form part of the primal rift between Judaism (the non–Christian Jews) and Christianity (the ‘Gentiles’ in the language of the Pauline letters).”[7]


Already in the year it was founded, on 1 December 1974, the Commission published its first official document with the title “Guidelines and Suggestions for Implementing the Conciliar Declaration “Nostra aetate” (No.4)”.[8] The crucial concern of this document consists in giving expression to the high esteem in which Christianity holds Judaism and stressing the great significance of dialogue with the Jews for the church, as stated in the words of the document: “On the practical level in particular, Christians must therefore strive to acquire a better knowledge of the basic components of the religious tradition of Judaism: they must strive to learn by what essential traits the Jews define themselves in the light of their own religious experience.” On the basis of the testimony of faith in Jesus Christ, the document reflects on the specific nature of the dialogue with Judaism, reference is made to reciprocal connections existing in the liturgy, new possibilities for rapprochement in the spheres of teaching, education and training, and finally suggestions are made for common social action.

 

R. Sungenis: Unfortunately, for all Cardinal Koch’s fraternizing with Judaism, not one word is said about doing so in order to evangelize the Jew to Jesus Christ. Instead, the typical liberal social gospel takes its place wherein “social action” and other mundane issues become the focus. It is evident that the prelature of the modern Catholic Church has lost its sense of mission and eternal purpose.

 


Cardinal Koch: Eleven years later on 24 June 1985, the Commission was able to present a second document with the title “Notes on the correct way to present the Jews and Judaism in preaching and catechesis in the Roman Catholic Church”.[9] This document has a stronger theological–exegetical orientation in so far as it reflects on the relationship of the Old and New Testaments, demonstrates the Jewish roots of Christian faith, explicates the manner in which “the Jews” are represented in the New Testament, points out the commonalities in liturgy, above all in the great festivals of the church year, and alludes to the relationship of Judaism and Christianity in history. As the title indicates, the focus of this document lies on the way Judaism is handled as a subject in preaching and catechesis in the Catholic Church. Of particular interest is the fact that this document also makes reference to the State of Israel, which has a special significance for observant Jews, but at the same time again and again provokes political tensions. With regard to this “land of the forefathers” the document emphasises: “Christians are invited to understand this religious attachment which finds its roots in biblical tradition without however making their own any particular religious interpretation of this relationship. The existence of the State of Israel and its political options should be envisaged in a perspective which is not in itself religious, but in their reference to the common principles of international law”. The permanence of Israel is however to be perceived as an “historical fact” and as a “sign to be interpreted within God’s design”.[10]


R. Sungenis: Neither the Catholic magisterium, Scripture nor Tradition has taught that “state of Israel,” the nation in the Middle East, is either guaranteed “permanence” or is a “sign” of “God’s design.” The “Commission” to which the Cardinal refers was, in effect, pushing the concept of Zionism – the idea that the physical land of Israel is somehow under divine protection for the Jews. This is little more than religion based on race – the very thing that was terminated when Christ died on the cross.

 

Cardinal Koch: The third and latest document of the Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews was presented to the public on 16 March 1998. It deals with the Shoah under the title “We remember. A reflection on the Shoah”.[11] The major impetus for this text came from the Jewish side. It delivers the harsh judgement that the balance of the 2000 year relationship between Jews and Christians is rather negative, it recalls the attitude of Christians towards the anti–Semitism of the National Socialists and focuses on the duty of Christians to remember the human catastrophe of the Shoah. In a letter at the beginning of this declaration Pope John Paul II expresses his hope that this document will really “help to heal the wounds of past misunderstandings and injustices. May it enable memory to play its necessary part in shaping a future in which the unspeakable iniquity of the Shoah will never again be possible.”


R. Sungenis: As is usually the case when the “Shoah” is brought up, nothing is said about the bad things Jews did to foment antagonism against themselves in Europe and Russia from the late 1800s to the present, nor is anything said about the genocide the Israeli government is perpetrating on the Palestinians today. The Jews are always made to appear as innocent victims of ruthless dictators. The history of the Jews tells quite a different story, however. Unfortunately, it seems that the whole modern effort for rapprochement with the Jews is based on trying to rectify the Shoah when in fact the Church should be educating the Jews as to how they can improve relations with the world so that the Jewish people are not persecuted in the future.

 

Cardinal Koch: In the series of Vatican documents reference must finally also be made to that voluminous text which was published by the Pontifical Bible Commission on 24 May 2001 and which deals explicitly with Jewish–Catholic dialogue: “The Jewish People and their Sacred Scripture in the Christian Bible”.[12] This involves the exegetically and theologically most weighty document of the Jewish–Catholic conversation and represents a rich treasure–trove of common topics which have their basis in the scriptures of Judaism and Christianity. The Sacred Scripture of the Jewish people is considered as “the fundamental component of the Christian bible”, the fundamental themes of the Scripture of the Jewish people and their adoption in the faith in Christ are discussed, and the manner in which Jews are represented in the New Testament is illuminated in detail. In the Foreword the Prefect of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith at that time, Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, advocates a “new respect for the Jewish interpretation of the Old Testament. On this subject the document says two things. First it declares that the Jewish reading of the Bible is a possible one, in continuity with the Jewish Scriptures of the Second Temple period, a reading analogous to the Christian reading, which developed in parallel fashion” (no. 22). It adds that Christians can learn a great deal from Jewish exegesis practised for more than 2000 years; in return Christians may hope that Jews can profit from Christian exegetical research.”

 

R. Sungenis: Rabbis certainly have insights into the Hebrew text of Scripture, but in the Christian framework these insights are limited since the rabbis refuse to extend the interpretation of Old Testament texts to Christ. For example, the Church has traditionally applied Isaiah 53 to Christ. Since that is the case, Isaiah 53, although possibly allowing a dual application similar to Isaiah 7:14 and other such Old Testament prophecies, the “Jewish reading” is merely a half-truth. Hence, if we really want to teach the Jews about the full meaning of the Old Testament, we must stress the fact that it is fulfilled in Christ. If the Jew doesn’t want to accept that fact, then the “dialogue” has reached an impasse.


Cardinal Koch: 3. Institutional dialogues at global level and their lines of development

 

Texts and documents, as important as they are, cannot replace personal encounters and dialogues face to face. In the first instance mention must be made of the many initiatives by individual Episcopal Conferences, local churches and academic institutions, which cannot of course be considered in detail here, although it is precisely in these places that concrete steps towards positive collaboration between Jews and Catholics are undertaken. The Holy See’s Commission is however happy to support such initiatives which assist in intensifying our friendship with Judaism. In the present context I must however concentrate on the institutional dialogues which the Holy See’s Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews assists in organising and conducting.


Even before the establishment of the Holy See’s Commission, there were contacts and links with various Jewish organisations which were of course located within the Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity. Since Judaism is multi–facetted and not presented as an organisational unity, the Catholic side was faced with the difficulty of deciding with whom one should take up actual dialogue, because it was not possible to conduct individual and independent dialogue with all Jewish groupings and organisations who had declared their readiness to dialogue. To resolve this problem the Jewish organisations took up the suggestion by the Catholic side to establish a single organisation for the religious dialogue. The so–called International Jewish Committee on Interreligious Consultations (IJCIC) represents on the Jewish side the official partner for the Holy See’s Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews. It comprises almost all large Jewish organisations, of which not a few have their seat in the USA.


The IJCIC was able to commence its work in 1970, and organised already one year later the first joint conference in Paris. The conferences which have been conducted regularly since then are the expression of the so–called International Catholic–Jewish Liaison Committee (ILC), and they shape the collaboration between the IJCIC and the Holy See’s Commission. In February of 2011 at the 21st Conference of the ILC we were able to look back with gratitude on 40 years of institutional dialogue and celebrate this jubilee once more in Paris. Much has developed over the past 40 years: confrontation has turned into successful collaboration, the previous conflict potential has become positive conflict management, and the co–existence of the past has been replaced by a load–bearing friendship. The bonds of friendship forged in the meantime have proved to be stable, so that it has become possible to tackle even controversial subjects together without the danger of permanent damage being done to the dialogue. This was all the more necessary because over the past decades the dialogue had not always been free of tensions. We need only recall the crises provoked in the eighties by the so–called “Waldheim affair” or the planned “Carmel in Auschwitz”. In most recent times one thinks of the so–called “Williamson affair” or also the very divergent opinions regarding a beatification of Pope Pius XII, whereby the attentive observer can hardly avoid the conclusion that on the part of the Jews the verdicts on this Pope have changed from the original profound gratitude to profound anxiety only since the drama by Hochhuth. In general however one can observe with appreciation that in Jewish–Catholic dialogue since the turn of the millennium above all, intensive attempts have been made to deal with any arising differences of opinion and conflicts openly and with a positive goal in mind, so that in this way the mutual relations have become stronger and the proverbial wisdom has been confirmed that when a torn bond is joined together again, the distance between the two ends becomes shorter.


Beside the dialogue with the IJCIC the institutional conversation with the Chief Rabbinate in Jerusalem should also be mentioned, which is clearly to be soon as a fruit of the encounter of Pope John Paul II with the Chief Rabbis in Jerusalem during his visit to Israel in March 2000. The first meeting was organised in June 2002 in Jerusalem, and since then a total of 11 such meetings have been conducted, which have taken place in Rome and Jerusalem alternately. The two delegations are relatively small so that a very personal and intensive discussion on various subjects is possible such as on the sanctity of life, the status of the family, the significance of the sacred scriptures for communal life, religious freedom, the ethical foundations of human behaviour, the ecological challenge, the relationship of secular and religious authority and the essential qualities of religious leadership in secular society. Since those taking part in the meetings on the Catholic side are bishops and priests and on the Jewish side almost exclusively rabbis it is hardly surprising that the individual subjects are also examined from a religious perspective. This statement is astonishing because normally within Orthodox Judaism the tendency prevails to avoid religious and theological questions. The dialogue with the Chief Rabbinate has in this regard enabled a further opening of Orthodox Judaism with Roman Catholic Church at a global level. After each meeting a joint declaration is published which in each instance testifies how rich the common spiritual heritage of Judaism and Christianity is and what valuable treasures are still to be unearthed. In reviewing ten years of the dialogue we can gratefully affirm that an intensive friendship has resulted which represents a firm foundation for the path into the future.

 

R. Sungenis: The above categories for “dialogue” are things in which liberals from both the Catholic and Jewish sides emphasize, to the exclusion of any attempt to evangelize the Jews. Their whole notion of religion is based on how well differing religions can relate to one another. Catholic liberals, among them Cardinal Koch, have basically given up on evangelism, and that is basically because they don’t believe in a conversion experience any longer. The only “conversion” they teach is the conversion to the liberal gospel of no conversion experience.


Cardinal Koch: The dialogue efforts of the Holy See’s Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews cannot of course be restricted to these two institutional dialogues. It is in fact intent on being open to all streams within Judaism and maintaining contact with all Jewish groupings and organisations that wish to establish links with the Holy See. The Jewish side shows a particular interest in private audiences with the Pope, which are in every instance prepared by us. Besides the direct contacts with Judaism the Commission also strives to provide impulses within the Catholic Church for dialogue with Judaism and to work together with individual Bishops’ Conferences to support them locally in the promotion of Jewish–Catholic conversation. The introduction of the “Dies Judaicus” is a good example of this. Over the past decades both the “dialogue ad extra” and the “dialogue ad intra” have led with increasing clarity to the awareness that Christians and Jews are dependent on one another and the dialogue between the two is as far as theology is concerned not a matter of choice but of duty.

 

R. Sungenis: Essentially, this means that in order to hide the fact that the Jews will not accept Jesus Christ as God and Savior, Cardinal Koch proposes that we just keep on talking to one another and never threaten to end the dialogue by asking the Jews to accept Jesus Christ. To camouflage what we know will be the inevitable answer from the Jews, we just keep talking and pretending that we are getting along. From this relationship, we can then discuss things like “the ecological challenge” and make it appear as if we are doing something important for the earth, which will then be our mutual salvation.

 

Cardinal Koch: Jews and Christians are precisely in their difference the one people of God who can enrich one another in mutual friendship. I do not have the right to judge what Judaism may gain from this dialogue for its own purposes.

 

R. Sungenis: No, Jews and Christians are not the “one people of God.” Additionally, being Jewish does not make one the “people of God.” Only belief in Jesus Christ makes one the people of God. Cardinal Koch, like most of the Catholic prelature today, has lost sight of what the Gospel is. After decades of capitulating to the Jews, they have denuded the Catholic Gospel of what it was in tradition when the “dialogue” the Church had with Jews was to tell them about Jesus Christ and salvation through him.

 

Cardinal Koch: I can only join Cardinal Walter Kasper in expressing the wish that it recognise that “separating Judaism from Christianity” would mean “robbing it of its universality”, which was already promised to Abraham.[13] For the Christian church however it is certainly true that without Judaism it is in danger of losing its location with salvation history and in the end declining into an unhistorical Gnosis.

 

R. Sungenis: No, the promise to Abraham did not join Judaism and Christianity. The promise to Abraham, as noted earlier, was that his spiritual progeny, not physical, would be given salvation in Jesus Christ. Today, Judaism is the religion of people who categorically reject Jesus Christ. Therefore, whatever Judaism had in the Old Testament is not present in Judaism today, and thus there can be no “universal” joining of the two religions. Judaism is a dead religion followed by people who are antithetical to almost everything Christianity holds sacred. I’m sorry to say that the only one who is in a “Gnostic” history here is Cardinal Koch, since he pretends to be “in the know” of a melding of two antithetical religions that neither Catholic tradition nor Scripture have ever taught.


Cardinal Koch: 4. Pope John Paul II and Jewish–Catholic dialogue

 

When one envisages the ramifications of Jewish–Christian dialogue, it becomes apparent that it must again and again be testified by concrete and authentic persons in order to remain vital. Certainly the documents and dialogues which have already been mentioned were inspired, prepared and realised by authoritative witnesses to Jewish–Christian dialogue. But it was always their goal that they should be translated into concrete reality by the personal engagement of further witnesses. One is reminded of John M. Oesterreicher, who as a convert dedicated his whole life and work to Jewish–Christian dialogue and also participated decisively in the drafting of “Nostra aetate”. Many fruitful initiatives towards the promotion of Jewish–Christian conversation which took place after the Council in various local churches must also be mentioned with gratitude. But for the Roman Catholic Church the signal effect emanating from the papacy is and remains of particular significance.[14]

Although Pope Paul VI had already taken decisive steps towards rapprochement with Judaism, the engagement in this issue by the leadership of the Catholic Universal Church was only really apprehended by the wider public in the form of Pope John Paul II. His passionate endeavours for Jewish–Christian dialogue surely have their roots initially in his personal biography. Karol Wojtyla grew up in the small Polish town of Wadowice which consisted to at least one quarter of Jewish. Since everyday contact and friendship with Jews was taken for granted already in his childhood it was for him as Pope an important concern to maintain his friendship with a Jewish school friend, and to intensify the bonds of friendship with Judaism in general.


Beyond that, John Paul was able to give visible expression to his concern for reconciliation with Judaism through grand public gestures. Already in the first year of his pontificate on 7 June 1979 he visited the former concentration camp of Auschwitz–Birkenau, where in front of the memorial stone with its Hebrew inscription he recalled the victims of the Shoah in a particular manner with the moving words: “This inscription awakens the memory of the People whose sons and daughters were intended for total extermination. This People draws its origin from Abraham, our Father in faith (cf. Rom 4:12) as was expressed by Paul of Tarsus. The very People that received from God the commandment “Thou shalt not kill” itself experienced in a special measure what is meant by killing. It is not permissible for anyone to pass by this inscription with indifference.”[15] Even more attention was paid by the public media to the visit by Pope John Paul II to the Roman synagogue on 13 April 1986, which is also accorded special significance because there was a Jewish community in Rome long before the Christian faith was brought to Rome. The historical significance of this event however is based above all on the fact that it was the first time in history the Bishop of Rome has visited a synagogue, to bear testimony to his respect for Judaism before the whole world. The gesture of the embrace of the Chief Rabbi Elio Toaff and Pope John Paul II remains an indelible memory.

 

R. Sungenis: Doesn’t the fact that all the popes before John Paul II thought it was either wrong or inappropriate to visit a Jewish synagogue, the emblem of rejecting Christ as God and Savior, matter to Cardinal Koch? Catholic liberals today show no shame that their religion conflicts with 1985 years of previous Catholic thought and teaching, and this is, perhaps, because they have made a new religion – the religion of appeasement – and have rejected the religion of salvation through conversion.


Cardinal Koch: Also to be seen against the background of the document “We remember. A reflection on the Shoah” is the prayer for forgiveness with which the Pope on 12 March in the Holy Year 2000 prayed for forgiveness of guilt towards the people of Israel in a public liturgy: “We are deeply saddened by the behaviour of those who in the course of history have caused these children of yours to suffer, and asking your forgiveness we wish to omit ourselves to genuine brotherhood with the people of the Covenant.”[16] In a slightly altered form Pope John Paul inserted this prayer for forgiveness as a written petition between the stones of the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem during his visit to Israel on 26 March 2000. The visit to the State of Israel by the Pope must therefore be evaluated not simply as an historic event, especially since the diplomatic recognition of the State of Israel by the Holy See had taken place in December 1993. The pope’s visit to Israel represented instead a unique stimulus for the promotion of Jewish–Catholic conversation. As the Pope visited the Holocaust Memorial Yad–Vashem, he commemorated the victims of the Shoah and prayed for them, he met with survivors of this incomparable tragedy and he entered into contact for the first time with the Jerusalem Chief Rabbinate. Later he met the two Chief Rabbis once more on 16 January 2004 in the Apostolic Palace. In addition, John Paul II repeatedly received Jewish personalities and groups, and during his numerous pastoral journeys his obligatory program always included an encounter with a local Jewish delegation wherever there was a sizeable Jewish community.

 

R. Sungenis: Perhaps the Pope should have asked the Jews to ask God forgiveness for their 1900+ years of rejecting Christ and persecuting Christianity. Unfortunately, the liberal prelates of the Catholic Church have been deceived as the rest of the world into making the Shoah into the eighth sacrament that everyone must be baptized into. Meanwhile, all the sins of the Jews are swept under the rug of history. That a pope of the Catholic Church would elevate the suffering of the Jews in World War II above every other ethnic group that suffered is deplorable.


Cardinal Koch: When one reviews in retrospect the great engagement of Pope John Paul II for Jewish –Catholic dialogue, one can without hesitation pronounce the judgement that during his long pontificate the course was set for the future of this necessary conversation and there can be no going back behind that which was then achieved. It is therefore not surprising that to this day John Paul II is held in high esteem by the Jewish dialogue partners and the admiration for him and his work of reconciliation remains unbroken.


5. Pope Benedict XVI and dialogue with the Jews

 

There can be no doubt that the great endeavours by Pope John Paul II for Jewish–Catholic dialogue was theologically legitimated and supported by the then Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. In the course of his duties at that time he himself maintained personal contact with Jews and published groundbreaking articles on the specific relationship of Christianity to Judaism within the context of world religions.[17] The foundation for this view of Ratzinger the theologian lies in his conviction that Sacred Scripture can only be understood as one single book as he explains himself in a biographical note: “So the decisive step for me was to learn to understand the connection between the Old and the New Testament, which is the foundation of all patristic theology. This theology depends on the interpretation of the scripture, the core of patristic exegesis is the concordia testamentorum mediated by Christ in the Holy Spirit.”[18] On this basis it is axiomatic for Joseph Ratzinger that there can be no access to Jesus and therefore no entry of the nations into the people of God without the acceptance in faith of the revelation of God who speaks in the Sacred Scripture which Christians term the Old Testament. It is therefore a core concern for him to demonstrate the profound connections of New Testament themes with Old Testament message, so that both the intrinsic continuity between the New and the Old Testament and the innovation of the New Testament message are clearly illuminated. Joseph Ratzinger’s verdict on the trial of Jesus in his book on Jesus of Nazareth for example, which has been acknowledged with particular gratitude on the part of the Jews,[19] namely that the biblical report of the trial of Jesus cannot serve as the basis for any assertion of collective Jewish guilt, was already clearly perceived by the theologian Ratzinger: “Jesus’ blood raises no call for retaliation but calls all to reconciliation. It has become as the letter to the Hebrews shows, itself the permanent Day of Atonement of God.”[20]


R. Sungenis: The Church has never officially taught that the Jews, collectively, were responsible for the death of Jesus; therefore Joseph Ratzinger’s book says nothing new. But there is something new that Joseph Ratzinger taught in his book – that Matthew made a mistake when he put the words “Let his blood be upon us and our children” in the Bible (Mt 27:25). This is an inexcusable assault on the veracity of the Gospels and the New Testament as a whole by a Catholic pope.

 

Cardinal Koch: Against the background of these theological convictions it cannot surprise us that Pope Benedict XVI carries on and progresses the conciliatory work of his predecessor with regard to Jewish–Catholic conversation. He not only addressed the first letter in his pontificate to the Chief Rabbi in Rome but also gave an assurance at his first encounter with a Jewish delegation on 9 June 2005 that the church was moving firmly on the fundamental principles of “Nostra aetate” and he intended to continue the dialogue in the footsteps of his predecessors. In reviewing the seven years of his pontificate we find that he has in this short space of time taken all those steps which Pope John Paul took in his 27–year pontificate: Pope Benedict XVI visited the former concentration camp Auschwitz–Birkenau on 28 May 2006; during his visit to Israel in May 2009 he too stood before the Wailing Wall, he met with the Chief Rabbinate of Jerusalem and prayed for the victims of the Shoah in Yad Vashem; and on 17 January 2010 he was warmly received by the Jewish community in Rome in their synagogue. His first visit to a synagogue was of course made already on 19 August 2005 in Cologne on the occasion of World Youth Day, and on 18 April 2008 he visited the Park East Synagogue in New York. So we can claim with gratitude that no other Pope in history has visited as many synagogues as Benedict XVI.

 

R. Sungenis: And sadly, he didn’t give the Jews one word of evangelism; not one word that Jesus Christ wants to be the God and Savior of the Jews and that the pope was there as a representative of that message. Consequently, Pope Benedict keeps the Jews in the darkness under the guise of being friendly with them. He has the dubious record of doing so more than any pope in history.

 

Cardinal Koch: All of these activities are indeed marked by his own personal style. While Pope John Paul II had a refined sense for grand gestures and strong images, Benedict XVI relies above all on the power of the word and humble encounter. That was given particularly clear expression during his visit to the memorial Yad Vashem when he deliberately referred to the name of this place and meditated on the God–given inalienability of the name of each individual person: “One can weave an insidious web of lies to convince others that certain groups are undeserving of respect. Yet try as one might, one can never take away the name of a fellow human being.”[21] Also deserving of special mention is the inimitable spiritual meditation by Pope Benedict XVI on the Decalogue, which he acknowledged as the “pole star of faith and of the morality of the people of God”[22], during his visit to the Chief Synagogue in Rome. In this way Pope Benedict XVI endeavours again and again through the power of his words and his spiritual profundity to highlight the multi–facetted riches of the common spiritual heritage of Judaism and Christianity and to add theological depth to the guidelines set down by the declaration “Nostra aetate”,[23] to which we will return again in conclusion.

 

R. Sungenis: Judaism today has no spiritual heritage with Christianity, since the Judaism of today rejects the Judaism of the Old Testament that looked forward to the coming of Jesus Christ.


Cardinal Koch: 6. Open theological questions in Jewish–Catholic dialogue

 

The Declaration of the Second Vatican Council on Judaism, that is the fourth Article of “Nostra aetate”, stood, as has surely become clear, in a decidedly theological framework. That is not meant to claim that all theological questions which arise in the relationship of Christianity and Judaism were solved there. They did receive there a promising stimulus, but require further theological reflection. That is also indicated by the fact that this Council document, unlike all other texts of the Second Vatican Council, could not in its notes refer back to preceding doctrinal documents and decisions of previous councils. Of course there had been earlier magisterial texts which focussed on Judaism, but “Nostra aetate” provides the first theological overview of the relationship of the Catholic Church to the Jews.

 

R. Sungenis: It could have referred to the Apostolic Constitution, Licet Perfidia Judaeorum, of Pope Innocent III in 1199 AD, as well as the Decree of the Holy Office of March 25, 1928 stated that Catholic Church “condemns hatred against the people formerly chosen by God, that hatred that ordinarily goes by the name of Antisemitism.” It could have also referred to the many statements in Catholic teaching that the Mosaic covenant has been abrogated so that there would be no confusion regarding this issue (e.g., Pope Piux XII, Mystici Corporis Christi, 29-30: “…the New Testament took the place of the Old Law which had been abolished.”; The Catechism of the Council of Trent: Part III: The Decalogue: “after the abrogation of the Law of Moses, all the Commandments contained in the two tables are observed by Christians, not indeed because their observance is commanded by Moses, but because they are in conformity with nature which dictates obedience to them”; Council of Florence: “that the matter pertaining to the law of the Old Testament, of the Mosaic law…although they were suited to the divine worship at that time, after our Lord’s coming had been signified by them, ceased, and the sacraments of the New Testament began”; Pope Urban VIII, Profession of Orthodox Faith, 1642: “Similarly, we profess that the legalities of the Old Testament, the ceremonies of the Mosaic Law, the rites, sacrifices, and sacraments have ceased at the coming of Our Lord Jesus Christ; they cannot be observed without sin after the promulgation of the Gospel”; Pope Benedict XV, Ex Quo, 63: “the Church of Christ has the power of renewing the obligation to observe some of the old precepts for just and serious reasons, despite their abrogation by the new Law.”


Cardinal Koch: Because it was such a breakthrough, the Council text is not infrequently over–interpreted, and things are read into it which it does not in fact contain. To name an important example: That the covenant that God made with his people Israel persists and is never invalidated – although this confession is true – cannot be read into “Nostra aetate”.

 

R. Sungenis: No, the covenant God made with Israel is invalidated. It is revoked, abrogated, canceled and nullified. It is heresy to say that it is not invalidated. I do commend Cardinal Koch, however, for pointing out that Nostra Aetate does not teach that the covenant with Israel  persists. I suggest Roy Schoeman take notice, since he says just the opposite in his book, Salvation is From the Jews, pages 352-353, with a footnote to Nostra Aetate.

 

Cardinal Koch: This statement was instead first made with full clarity by Pope John Paul II when he said during a meeting with Jewish representatives in Mainz on 17 November 1980 that the Old Covenant had never been revoked by God: “The first dimension of this dialogue, namely the encounter between God’s people of the Old Covenant which has never been revoked by God and that of the New Covenant is at the same time a dialogue within our church, as it were between the first and second book of her bible.”[24]

 

R. Sungenis: Unfortunately, John Paul II caused more confusion than help with this statement, since he did not reveal what “Old Covenant” he was speaking about. If he was referring to the Old Testament Scriptures (which seems to be the reasoning of para. 181 in the 1994 Catechism of the Catholic Church), he would be correct. If he was referring to the spiritual side of the Abrahamic covenant (cf. Genesis 12:3; Gal 3:8-29), he would be correct. But if he was referring to the Mosaic covenant, he would be categorically wrong, since the Catholic magisterium, the consensus of the Fathers, and Sacred Scripture all say that the Mosaic covenant has been abrogated. This error was corrected in the 2006 United States Catholic Catechism for Adults which had previously stated on page 131 that the Mosaic covenant was still valid for the Jews.


Cardinal Koch: This statement too has given rise to misunderstandings, for example the implication that if the Jews remain in a valid covenant relationship with God, there must be two different ways of salvation, namely the Jewish path of salvation without Christ and the path of salvation for all other people, which leads through Jesus Christ. As obvious as this answer seems to be at first glance, it is not able to solve satisfactorily at least the highly complex theological question how the Christian belief in the universal salvific significance of Jesus Christ can coherently be conceptually combined with the equally clear conviction of faith in the never–revoked covenant of God with Israel.[25]

 

R. Sungenis: Obviously, Cardinal Koch doesn’t understand “the covenant of God with Israel,” but that, sadly, is the case with many prelates in the Catholic Church today. Most of them are either totally ignorant or totally deceived on this issue, and we can credit John Paul II for creating much of that confusion. The only covenant that was “never-revoked” is the Abrahamic covenant, but that was made with Abraham when he was a Gentile and, according to St. Paul, is the very reason that the Gospel came to the Gentiles (cf. Genesis 12:3: Gal. 3:8, 17-19). Jews were also invited into this covenant, but only if they followed the footsteps of the faith of Abraham (Rom 4:1-22).

 

God does not have a covenant with Israel today. When Jesus died on the cross the covenant with Israel was abrogated (cf. 2 Cor 3:6-14; Col 2:14-15; Hebrews 7:18; 8:1-13; 10:9-16). As for “the Christian belief in the universal salvific significance of Jesus Christ,” that has never been a “complexity” since the Gospel of salvation in Jesus Christ has always been available to the Jews. Unfortunately, the Jews cannot hear this Gospel unless it is preached to them (Rom 10:17), but Josepf Ratzinger’s new book, Jesus of Nazareth, Part II, says that we should no longer preach the Gospel to the Jews, and Cardinal Kock seems to agree with that conclusion. Hence, the “complexity” is only in the mind of Cardinal Koch.

 

Cardinal Koch: That the church and Judaism cannot be represented as “two parallel ways to salvation”, but that the church must “witness to Christ as the Redeemer for all” was established already in the second document published by the Holy See’s Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews in 1985. The Christian faith stands or falls by the confession that God wants to lead all people to salvation, that he follows this path in Jesus Christ as the universal mediator of salvation, and that there is no “other name under heaven given to the human race by which we are to be saved” (Acts 4:12). The concept of two parallel paths of salvation would in the least call into question or even endanger the fundamental understanding of the Second Vatican Council that Jews and Christians do not belong to two different peoples of God, but that they form one people of God.

 

R. Sungenis: The solution is simple. The Second Vatican Council doesn’t say that Jews and Christians form “one people of God,” or that the Jews today are a “people of God.” It only says the Church is the people of God. The Jews were the people of God in the Old Testament, through the Mosaic covenant, but that covenant has been revoked. The confusion is caused by the fact that Cardinal Koch doesn’t understand the covenants of Scripture. It seems silly that we have to go through the ABC’s of Scripture and theology with a cardinal of the Catholic Church, but this is precisely what it has come down to. Decades of liberal theology has made the Catholic prelature like children trying to survive on a desert island.


Cardinal Koch: On the one hand, from the Christian confession there can be only one path to salvation. However, on the other hand, it does not necessarily follow that the Jews are excluded from God’s salvation because they do not believe in Jesus Christ as the Messiah of Israel and the Son of God. Such a claim would find no support in the soteriological understanding of St Paul, who in the Letter to the Romans definitively negates the question he himself has posed, whether God has repudiated his own people: “For the grace and call that God grants are irrevocable” (Rom 11:29).

 

R. Sungenis: This is typical of the ignorance Catholic prelates have for Scripture today. This distortion of Romans 11:29 is just one example of what they have done. Unlike Cardinal Koch, St. Paul taught that the Jew can be saved if he accepts Jesus Christ as God and Savior. The only reason St. Paul said “God has not rejected his people whom he foreknew” (Romans 11:1-2) was because God still offered each and every Jew the possibility to be saved in Jesus Christ. Cardinal Koch’s confusion comes when he injects Jewish nationalism and ethnicity into the mix, as if God had not rejected the nation of Israel. But God did reject the nation of Israel when he abrogated the Mosaic covenant.

 

Cardinal Koch: That the Jews are participants in God’s salvation is theologically unquestionable, but how that can be possible without confessing Christ explicitly, is and remains an unfathomable divine mystery.

 

R. Sungenis: The only “mystery” is why Cardinal Koch believes it is a mystery. His first mistake is believing that the Jews are participants in God’s salvation just because they are Jewish. He seems to believe in some kind of corporate salvation of the Jews; a salvation that has been attained already in spite of the fact that Jews at large have made no confession of Christ. What Cardinal Koch doesn’t seem to understand is that the Jew is invited to come to salvation in the Church; he is not a participant in God’s salvation prior to his acceptance of Jesus Christ.

 

Cardinal Koch: It is therefore no accident that Paul’s soteriological reflections in Romans 9–11 on the irrevocable redemption of Israel against the background of the Christ–mystery culminate in a mysterious doxology: “Oh, the depth of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God! How inscrutable are his judgments and how unsearchable his ways” (Rom 11:33).

 

R. Sungenis: St. Paul does not teach that there is “an irrevocable redemption of Israel.” He teaches only that the “gifts and calling of God are irrevocable or unrepented” (Romans 11:29). That Cardinal Koch has distorted the words of Romans 11:29 so badly is common today among Catholic prelates. What are the “gifts and calling”? In the context, they refer to the Gospel of salvation, but Cardinal Koch seems to think they refer to the national identity and protection of Israel as a state. This is the typical liberal understanding of Scripture, simply because liberals have lost the sense of what the Gospel is.

 

Cardinal Koch: It is likewise no accident that Pope Benedict XVI in the second part of his book on Jesus of Nazareth allows Bernard of Clairvaux to say in reference to the problem confronting us, that for the Jews “a determined point in time has been fixed, which cannot be anticipated”.[26]

 

R. Sungenis: That Pope Benedict would put his name to the idea that we are not to preach the Gospel to the Jews today because God has plans to save the Jews in the future is one of the saddest moments of his pontificate and one of the most horrific errors ever propagated. Please see my review of Jesus of Nazareth here:

http://www.catholicintl.com/index.php/latest-news/247-review-of-jesus-of-nazareth-part-two-by-joseph-ratzingerpope-benedict-xvi

Cardinal Koch: This complexity is also attested by the re–formulation of the Good Friday Prayer for the Jews in the extraordinary form of the Roman rite which was published in February 2008. Although the new Good Friday prayer in the form of a plea to God confesses the universality of salvation in Jesus Christ within an eschatological horizon (“as the fullness of the peoples enters your church”),[27] it has been vigorously criticised on the part of Jews – and of course also of Christians – and misunderstood as a call to explicit mission to the Jews.[28] It is easy to understand that the term ‘mission to the Jews’ is a very delicate and sensitive matter for the Jews because in their eyes it involves the very existence of Israel itself.

 

R. Sungenis: We again see the fulcrum upon which Cardinal Koch bases his theological conclusions – Jewish nationalism. It becomes the ultimate determiner of how the Church approaches the Jews. In other words, the Jews are controlling how the Church relates to them. What is not being said but what is underneath the Cardinal’s words is that the Jews would accuse the Church of being “anti-semitic” if it did not recognize Jewish nationalism as the final arbiter. The real truth is that the Jews complain about the Church having a “mission to the Jews” because the Jews know that the message contains the person of Jesus Christ as God and Savior. The whole essence of being a Jew means that one rejects Jesus Christ.

 

Cardinal Koch: On the other hand however, this question also proves to be awkward for us Christians too, because for us the universal salvific significance of Jesus Christ and consequently the universal mission of the church are of fundamental significance. The Christian church is naturally obligated to perceive its evangelisation task in respect of the Jews, who believe in the one God, in a different manner from that to the nations. In concrete terms this means that – in contrast to several fundamentalist and evangelical movements – the Catholic Church neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.

 

R. Sungenis: No, there has been no official teaching from the Catholic Church that says it “neither conducts nor supports any specific institutional mission work directed towards Jews.” It is Cardinal Koch and his group of liberal prelates who are teaching their opinions as if they were Catholic doctrine. The Church has always had a mission to the Jews, beginning with Pentecost. If the direction of that mission was modified, it was only because the Church found that the Jews would not accept the Gospel (cf. Acts 13:45-48; 1 Thess 2:14-16), not, as Cardinal Koch believes, because the Church thought of the Jews already as “the people of God” or that Jews would be insulted by Jesus Christ or that the Jews had a right to their own nationalistic religion.

 

Cardinal Koch: In his detailed examination of the question of so–called mission to the Jews Cardinal Karl Lehmann rightly discerned that on closer investigation one finds “as good as no institutional mission to the Jews in Catholic mission history”.

 

R. Sungenis: The truth is, the Church never designated ANY group as constituting an “institutional mission.” It had a mandate to “Preach the Gospel to all nations” and no nation was singled out. But it seems that Cardinals Koch and Lehmann want to use this non-entity to make it appear as if the Jews are not to have the Gospel preached to them. It is sad how Catholic prelates distort the truth on this matter.

 

Cardinal Koch: “We have an abundant share in other forms of inappropriate attitudes towards the Jews and therefore have no right to elevate ourselves above others. But in respect to a specific and exclusive ‘mission to the Jews’ there should be no false consternation or unjustified self–accusation in this regard.”[29] The in–principle rejection of an institutional mission to the Jews does not on the other hand exclude that Christians bear witness to their faith in Jesus Christ also to Jews, but they should do so in an unassuming and humble manner, particularly in view of the great tragedy of the Shoah.

 

R. Sungenis: In other words, Cardinal Koch is teaching that the Church has none, and will develop no mission to the Jews, but it’s all right for the Church’s people to give the Gospel to the Jews. How much sense does that make? How can the Church’s members be told to do something that the Church herself is not willing to do and give marching orders for? Since when is there to be a dichotomy on what the Church and her members practice? This is the kind of absurdity we come to when the basic foundation of Catholic teaching has been overturned. It produces contradictions in the Christian faith.


Cardinal Koch: 7. Prospects

 

It must be obvious that within the framework of this conference it is not possible to delve more deeply into these open theological questions. That a good deal more effort in theological reflection is required is also affirmed by the project published in 2011, “Christ Jesus and the Jewish People Today“, produced as an initiative of the Holy See’s Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews by an informally convoked international group of Christian theologians, to which individual Jewish experts and friends were invited to participate as critical observers.[30] No matter how worthwhile this attempt may be to examine anew the specific question of how to conceptually reconcile the Christian confession of the universal soteriological significance of Jesus Christ with the equally Christian faith conviction that God steadfastly stands by his covenant with Israel with historical–soteriological faithfulness, Cardinal Walter Kasper states realistically in his preface, that even this conversation has in no way arrived at a conclusion: “We are only standing at the threshold of a new beginning. Many exegetical, historical and systematical questions are still open and there will presumably always be such questions.”[31]

 

R. Sungenis: God cannot “stand by a covenant with Israel” because there is no covenant with Israel. God stands by the New Covenant in Jesus Christ and invites the Jew to become a part of it.


Cardinal Koch: Jewish–Catholic dialogue will therefore never be unemployed, especially at the academic level, particularly since the epoch–making new course set by the Second Vatican Council regarding the relationship between Jews and Christians is naturally constantly being put to the test. On the one hand the scourge of anti–Semitism seems to be ineradicable in today’s world; and even in Christian theology the age–old Marcionism and anti–Judaism re–emerge with a vengeance again and again, and in fact not only on the part of the traditionalists but even within the liberal strands of current theology. In view of such developments the Catholic Church is obliged to denounce anti–Judaism and Marcionism as a betrayal of its own Christian faith, and to call to mind that the spiritual fraternity between Jews and Christians has its firm and eternal foundation in Holy Scripture.

 

R. Sungenis: The Catholic Church rejected Judaism because Judaism does not believe in Jesus Christ. It rejected Marcionism because Marcionism rejected the Old Testament. But it also rejects the new religion of Cardinal Koch, since it refuses to teach that the Jews are a “people of God.” Anti-semitism is fostered by Cardinal Koch when he attempts to make the Jewish people into something that they are not; when he elevates the Jewish people and Jewish nationalism as if they were sacred. People know this is wrong, and thus they begin to resent both the Jews who are living it and liberal Catholic prelates like Cardinal Koch and Cardinal Kasper who are promoting it.

 

Cardinal Koch: On the other hand, the demand by the Second Vatican Council to foster mutual understanding and respect between Jews and Christians must continue to be accorded due attention. That is the indispensable prerequisite for guaranteeing that there will be no recurrence of the dangerous estrangement between Christians and Jews, but that they remain aware of their spiritual kinship.

 

R. Sungenis: We have no “spiritual kinship” with a people who reject Jesus Christ as God and Savior.

 

Cardinal Koch: We will therefore be grateful for every contribution made here to expand the dialogue with Judaism on the foundation of “Nostra aetate”, and to arrive at a better understanding between Jews and Christians so that Jews and Christians as the one people of God bear witness to peace and reconciliation in the unreconciled world of today and can thus be a blessing not only for one another but also jointly for humanity.

 

R. Sungenis: Cardinal Koch will find no peace, and that is because he is preaching a Judaized Gospel that is antithetical to the Catholic magisterium, tradition and Scripture. He is renewing the same heresy that was present in the book of Galatians and which St. Paul renounced. I call upon Cardinal Koch to repent of his heresy and begin preaching the truth.

 

Comments  

 
-2 #16 2012-11-23 14:56
I would like to make one more point here.

While it is certain from a Catholic perspective that the Mt Sinai covenant is no longer operative, the covenant with Abraham is indeed still operative in respect to the Jews today, to some unspecified extent. That it is operative in respect to Israel after the flesh is stated by St Paul in these words from Romans 11: 28-29: "As concerning the gospel, they are enemies for your sakes; but as touching the election, they are beloved for the fathers' sakes. For the gifts and the calling of God are without repentance."

Since St Paul explains elsewhere that the blessing of Abraham is 'to his seed' meaning Christ and not Israel after the flesh, it is clear that their being beloved of God cannot mean that they have a separate operative covenant that guarantees their individual salvation on the basis of their racial identity. But they are, nevertheless, on the basis of their racial identity, beloved, on account of their descending from the patriarchs, to whom were given the promises.

I think a good example by analogy of this love is the case of Ishmael. God made it clear that the promise was to come to Isaac. Yet Abraham prayed to God in these words: 'O that Ishmael might live before Thee!' And God hears the prayer, answering that He will bless Ishmael, though it is not through him that the Christ will come.

In a similar way, I think, God holds the Jewish people, after the flesh, beloved, for the sake of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, through whom they descend after the flesh.

Whichever of them or anyone else which oppose the gospel, however, are also under a curse. That, to me, is the riddle of the Jew.
Quote
 
 
-1 #15 2012-11-23 14:30
While I think Dr. S. makes some good points here, I think he misses a great deal of the overall thrust of Vatican II teachings on how to regard the Jews.

Discussions about our theological differences with the Jews have, I think, a 2-fold purpose: 1] to facilitate Jewish conversion to Catholicism, 2] to promote the dignity of the Jews as human beings so that Catholics and Christians do not despise them for not being Christians.

To promote both purposes, we minimize those elements of our Faith, and change those elements of our liturgy, which far too readily work against those purposes.

There may be some theological changes resulting from these conversations with the Jews but they are to be in the service of the purposes already mentioned, and not for the purpose of changing Catholic dogma--an absurd prospect.

True enough, not all Catholics have understood those purposes in the way I have stated them. Some want to change dogma, for instance, as for example when some say that salvation for Jewish people, as for everyone else, doesn't normatively have to come through faith in Christ and membership in His Church. But this is an error in the application of Vatican II, rather than a necessary corollary of the teaching of Vatican II, in my opinion.

Much of what Fr. Koch says here is in regard to how we should best get along with the Jews. I think Dr. S. sometimes misunderstands what Fr. Koch is saying in this regard as being evidence of his desire to change Catholic dogma. I see some evidence of that from Fr. Koch, but very little.
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-1 #14 2012-10-11 23:19
The Jewish thing is as old as...no, wait, older than Christianity. There's an old Jewish saying; get two Jews in a room and you'll get three opinions - Jews are happy to argue their way forward or sideways, rarely backwards - if Catholics are happy to argue their way to apostasy...well, no one has a gun to their head is the Jewish - Christian 'dialogue'. But in terms of problems, Judaism which is part of True revelation is not the problem - the theistic magnum opus of the father of lies know as islam IS the problem.
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0 #13 2012-07-16 14:07
Robert states "Thank you, non-Spartacus (don't know what else to call you :) Alas, I am virtually alone in my fight against the Jewish assault on the Catholic Church"

Recall, I stood with you on many accusations, still my name is smeared out there as an "antisemite" by certain people....
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-1 #12 2012-07-16 14:05
Not spartacus-you like Del Val and chide "liberal Catholics", yet, you launch attacks on the SSPX, the Remnant,etc?
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+2 #11 2012-06-21 14:10
I begin to wonder how long this facade of defence of the Holocaust can be maintained by the Church in the face of the mounting revisionist challange on the numbers.
But then as in so many areas of our Church and at the highest levels people are being promoted who literally do not know what they are talking about and are put into positions of authority where they teach error and confusion not only about the history of the Church but about basic facts and doctrine.
All that seems to matter is following the party line.
As this excerpt so graphically shows, the ignorance of even the cardinalate is just shocking.
So we read about Curia officials who check things up on Wikipedia(!, who make ludicrous statements about the Crusades,or evolution, who engage in dialogue with other religions with a less than perfect grasp of their own.
Because feelings and emotions are the new facts.
Facts differentiate, facts define, facts establish identity.They get in the way of unity, so why bother if they are even accurate.
To think It was only 60 years ago that we had an Index of prohibited books!
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+2 #10 2012-06-21 08:06
Dear Dr. Sungenis,

I greatly admire your writings and its wonderful to see the fresh thinking you and your colleague are bringing to scientific matters and challenging the anti Catholic mafia that have neld sway in the west for far too long.

Whatever one may think about SSPX and + Bishop williamson in particular, its a sign of the extraordinary power of the Jewish lobby within the Church that the Archdiocese of California actually banned Bishop Williamson from ever speaking there. Surely this is totally unheard of and illegal?
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+1 #9 2012-06-04 07:26
Thank you so much for your hard work Dr. Sungenis. I'm uplifted to know that at least someone as smart as you is out there fearlessly defending the faith.
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+1 #8 2012-06-03 18:17
Let Cardinal Koch hear Pope Clement VIII: “The Bible itself says that the Jews are an accursed people.”

And these popes:

Pope Stephen III: “With great sorrow and mortal anxiety, We have heard that the Jews have in a Christian land the same rights as Christians, that Christian men and women live under the same roof with these traitors and defile their souls day and night with blasphemies.” (Epistle to the Bishop of Norbonne)

Pope Saint Gregory VII: “We exhort your Royal Majesty [King Alfonse VI of Castile], not to further tolerate, that the Jews rule Christians and have power over them. For to allow that Christians are subordinated to Jews and are delivered to their whims, means to oppress the Church of God, means to revile Christ himself.” (Regesta IX. 2)

Pope Innocent III at the Fourth Ecumenical Lateran Council: “They shall not appear in public at all on the days of lamentation and on passion Sunday; because some of them on such days, as we have heard, do not blush to parade in very ornate dress and are not afraid to mock Christians who are presenting a memorial of the most sacred passion and are displaying signs of grief. What we most strictly forbid however, is that they dare in any way to break out in derision of the Redeemer.”

Pope Gregory IX: “We order all our brother bishops absolutely to suppress the blasphemy of Jews in your dioceses, churches, and communities, so that they do not dare raise their necks, bent under eternal slavery, to revile the Redeemer.”

Pope Innocent III at the Fourth Ecumenical Lateran Council: “We therefore renew in this canon, on account of the boldness of the offenders, what the Council of Toledo providently decreed in this matter: we forbid Jews to be appointed to public offices, since under cover of them they are very hostile to Christians.”
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+4 #7 2012-06-03 07:43
I'm out of my league on this site, but I'm so enraged by subversive moles like Koch I felt I had to write a comment. I don't doubt Jews were singled out for persecution and murder during WW II and that the subject is worthy of the Church's teaching universal moral principles from such horrors, but I don't buy the Holocaust narrative. I believe it's a hoax, making all those in the Church jamming Church teaching into the Holocaust template cowards at best. Isn't there some teaching about a sense of the faith allowing us to disregard new teachings that contradict things like the Gospel of John? Anyway, I not only don't accept Jews as my spiritual elder brothers, I see them as the Synagogue of Satan and the Church's perennial enemy.
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