A History of Judaism and Christianity: Towards Healing of the Original Wound of Division
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This book, pastoral in nature, is to provide the reader with an in-depth analysis of the challenging history of Judaism, Israel, and the Christian church. After offering an introduction to the First Testament (in Hebrew, Tanakh), the author proceeds to portray an image of Early Christianity or the Jesus Movement during the Apostolic Era to the beginning of the fourth century. During the early part of this era, there was a vibrant union between Jewish believers in Jesus (in Hebrew, Yeshua) and Gentile believers in Jesus. However, over these years, anti-Semitism grew within the Christian Church that resulted in a wound of division between the two segments of the Christian faith. This division resulted in anti-Semitic attitudes, discrimination, exiles and pogroms against the Jewish people, the nation of Israel. This lead, in part to one of the most tragic events in human history, the Holocaust or the Shoah. The author documents factors, both distal and proximate, of the tragedy. Beginning in the decade after WWII, the creation of the State of Israel in 1948 and, the Catholic Council called Vatican Council II, new hopes for repentance, reconciliation, and healing have begun between the Christian Church, Israel and Messianic Judaism.
Sources to the work emerge from the theologies of Judaism, Christianity, and Messianic Judaism. The document is framed sociologically by using ideal types and historical sociological materials.
The goal is for the Christian Church to remember, repent of her collective sins against the Jewish people and to journey towards reconciliation among Jews, Messianic Jews, and Christians.
Donald Swenson
He has a PhD degree from Notre Dame University in Notre Dame, Indiana and has spent his career teaching sociology at various universities. He has completed 30 years at Mount Royal University (being Professor Emeritus), Calgary, Alberta Canada. Most of that time has been spent in teaching, research and publishing. He has presented over 60 papers on the sociology of family, religion, of Christianity, Judaism and Islam. This will be his nineth book for publication with a special emphasis on the relationship between Christianity and Judaism.
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A History of Judaism and Christianity - Donald Swenson
Copyright © 2021 Donald Swenson.
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Scripture taken from the Complete Jewish Study Bible (CJB)Copyright
@ 2016 by David H. Stern. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Excerpt from THE NEW JERUSALEM BIBLE, copyright (c) 1985
by Darton, Longman & Todd, Ltd. and Doubleday, a division of
Random House/Penguin, Inc. Reprinted by Permission.
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WestBow Press rev. date: 07/06/2021
CONTENTS
Dedication and Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1The Prophetic Faith: The Tanakh Remembering, Repenting, and Reconciling
Chapter 2The Mother of all Churches: The Jerusalem Church Remembering, Repenting and Reconciling
Chapter 3The First Wound of Division–The Separation of Gentile Believers in Jesus from the Jewish Believers in Yeshua: Remembering, Repenting and Reconciling
Chapter 4Jewish Christian Relationships From the Early Medieval Era to the end of the Early Modern Period: Remembering, Repenting, and Reconciling
Chapter 5Judaism and Christianity in the Modern Era and Post–Modern Eras Exclusive of 1933–1945: Remembering, Repenting and Reconciling Towards Healing
Chapter 6The Tragic Interlude: The Shoah 1933–1945
Chapter 7Eschatology and the Return of the Messiah Remembering, Repenting and Reconciling
Chapter 8Conclusions Remembering, Repenting and Reconciling
DEDICATION AND
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I dedicate this work to healing between the Jewish and Gentile Body of Messiah.
Also, I dedicate this book to Angela, my wife, the Swenson’s, the Pearce’s, the O’Dwyer’s, the Love One Another Community of Calgary, Alberta, Canada, and the Alleluia Community of Augusta, Georgia, USA.
I am very grateful to Angela who stood with me as I spent many hours researching and writing this book. I am also thankful to Janet Hatfield of the Alleluia Community who did the copy editing of the manuscript.
INTRODUCTION
Remembering, Repenting
and Reconciling
ORIENTATION
Many articles and books have been written on the relationship between Judaism and Christianity. The unique feature of this writing is its pastoral emphasis. By this I mean it is a document that calls for response as the history is told. It is told not only to inform the reader of the contents of this history but also to seriously remember the past and to anticipate the future. Much of the history between the two religions is fraught with pain and suffering as Christianity has dominated Judaism for nearly two thousand years. This is to be remembered that, in turn, we may repent and, in this way, pave the way toward reconciliation. Reconciliation will happen primarily in the future when Israel is restored and the one true humanity (Jewish and Gentile believers in Yeshua¹) are united in an eternal, supernatural eschaton when Yeshua, in Adonai², is king of the whole earth and the cosmos as written in Zechariah, Then Adonai will be king over the whole world. On that day Adonai will be the only one, and his name will be the only name
(14:9).
Two primary themes capture this document: (1) the mysteries of the kingdom and, (2), the many branches of Christianity being grafted into Israel as branches are on an olive tree (see Romans 11:17). The first theme is dependent on the scholarship of Rabbi Mark Kinzer (2018), it is argued that an aspect of the mystery of the kingdom is the link between Yeshua being crucified and raised from the dead, and Jerusalem (a symbol of the Jewish people) being crucified and raised from the dead as well. Except for the first 150 years of Christianity, Jerusalem has been crucified
or has suffered much, both at the hands of Christians and secular governments. Much of this history of suffering will be documented in this text. The theme of resurrection is the theme of hope, healing, and restoration so well evidenced by Yehsua’s resurrection and Israel being born in a day
in 1948. After that date, there have been many resurrections
consisting of reconciliation among Jews, Christians and Messianic Jews. This story will be documented in Chapter Five.
The second theme is based on the letter of Paul to the Romans, chapter 11. The phrase being grafted in
needs some explanation. Consider two olive trees, one a cultivated olive tree and another uncultivated. The text reads of a wild olive tree which was uncultivated (Romans 11:17). Those of Gentile origin are rooted in pagan gods and goddesses or, in modern times, under the yoke of the gods and goddesses of secularism. The Apostle wrote that they were: without a Messiah, estranged from the national life of Israel. Gentiles were foreigners to the covenants (from Israel) with the promises. They were in the world without hope and without God
(Ephesians 2:12). Further, "You used to be dead because of your sins and acts of disobedience. You walked in the ways of this world (‘olam hazel) and obeyed the Ruler of the Powers of the Air (Satan or the Adversary) who is still at work among the disobedient (Ephesians 2:1–2). They were
spiritually dead" (II Corinthians 5:14). This branch is grafted into the Israelite, cultivated olive tree. A more extensive outline of this theme will appear below.
MYSTERIES OF THE KINGDOM
Paul visited the disciples (both Jewish and Gentile believers) in Ephesus for his last time and gave encouragement to them. He reiterated to them the Good News of Yeshua in many ways, of which stand out as central to his proclamation: (1), that all are to turn from sin to God and to trust in Yeshua the Messiah; (2), to declare in depth the Good News of God’s love and kindness; and (3), the Kingdom of God consisting of the whole plan of God (Acts 20:17–27³).
This document is an attempt to address what could be part of the mystery of the whole plan that God has for His original people, Israel, for the believers in Yeshua known primarily as Christians, for the whole of humanity, and, indeed, for the vastness of Adonai’s creation. The primary source, besides the Tanakh⁴ and the New Testament, is the work of Mark Kinzer (2018) in his text: Jerusalem, Crucified, Jerusalem Risen.
In this introduction, I will outline the primary thesis that Kinzer offers along with the many sub–theses in his work that serve as a structure of this introduction. These themes will form a base of the following chapters. This will be followed by the inclusion of Gentile believers in the divine plan for all of humanity and as being grafted into Israel
and then, the methodology of the text.
The title of the text by Kinzer (2018) carries within itself the fundamental thesis of his work. Kinzer, an Emeritus Rabbi in the Messianic Jewish movement, compares the crucifixion of Yeshua to the suffering of Jerusalem from the exile of the Jewish people in 70 and 135 CE to the termination of the Shoah in 1945. As Yeshua did suffer in his passion and death, so did the people of Israel suffer over these long centuries. One may describe His passion compared to the passion of the Jewish people from their exile in 70 CE to the beginning of World War II in 1939. His crucifixion can be compared to the Shoah with the death of six million European Jews. As did the Jewish people suffer, so did Yeshua weep along with the millions of cries of Adonai’s people in the death camps of the Nazis. As we journey through the historical eras, we will find that Christians have not joined themselves with Yeshua in this regard but have, sadly, rejoiced in the suffering of the Jewish people. The Tanakh clearly says that those who rejoice or celebrate the tragedies of Israel or Jerusalem will be punished. A text that confirms this is from Ezekiel who, in speaking to the nation of Amon, says:
Adonai Elohim says, ‘Because you gloated when my sanctuary was profaned, when the land of Israel was laid waste, and when the House of Judah went into exile and because you clapped your hands and stamped your feet, full of malicious joy over the land of Israel; I’m going to stretch out my hand over you and deliver you as plunder to the nations; I will cut you off from being a people and cause you to cease from being a nation; I will destroy you. Then you will know that I am Adonai’ (Ezekiel 25:3 and 6–7).
A second confirming text says: Anyone who injures you injures the very pupil of my eye. But I will shake my hand over them, and they will be plundered by those who were formerly slaves
(Zechariah 2:12–13).
Rather than rejoicing, Christians are called to lament and cry with Adonai’s original people who lived in exile and suffering. In this way, there may be an acknowledgement of sin against Adonai’s chosen people followed by repentance.
But this is only part of the story. Yeshua did not stay in the grave as proclaimed by the psalmist, "For you will not abandon me to Sh’ol or allow your holy one to rot in the grave" (Psalm 16:10). Fundamental to the Christian faith, Yeshua was raised from the dead. So also did Israel rise from the dead as recorded in the Book of Ezekiel (37:1–14). The genesis of this rising corresponds to the establishment of the nation of Israel in 1948⁵. Since that time, millions of Jews have come back to the land of Israel. They have made what is known as Aliyah. It is the resurrected Yeshua who stands with the genesis of the resurrected Jerusalem, or Israel. This is to be culminated in his return in glory when he will set his feet on the Mount of Olives, just east of Jerusalem (see Zechariah 14:4).
Kinzer expands the meaning of the Gospel, the euangelion, beyond its basic meaning of salvation through belief in Yeshua as Messiah, the Son of Man, and the Son of God. He offers two more interpretations. First, euangelion also includes the restoration of Jerusalem, the land and all of Israel where Yeshua will be king or sovereign. The wider vision is cosmic—the restoration of the earth with a new heaven and a new earth⁶ with Jerusalem as the epicenter.
Emerging from this foundational interpretation is that Jerusalem, the Holy City and City of the Great King
(Psalm 48:3), is under the lordship of Yeshua as king. The city is the locus of God’s action in human history for she is both axis mundi and axis temporis⁷.
From 63 BCE, when the Romans conquered Israel under Pompey (106–48 BCE), until 1948, this land, and Jerusalem, had been under the aegis of the Gentiles. This long period is known by Yeshua (Luke 21:24) and others as The Age of the Gentiles.
In 1948 and 1967, the Age of the Gentiles ceased. It is after these two momentous years that the ultimate restoration of Jerusalem begins. It appears that the prayer of Isaiah has partially been fulfilled: "You who call on Adonai, give yourself no rest; and give Him no rest until He restores Jerusalem and makes it the praise on earth (Isaiah 62:6–7). But the restoration of the land of Israel and Jerusalem has much wider implications. It is through Israel and Jerusalem that the whole of creation is renewed for
That Day will bring on the destruction of the heavens by fire, and the elements will melt from the heat; but we, following along with his promise, wait for the new heavens and a new earth" (II Peter 3:12–13).
An implicit interpretation of replacement theology is that the rejection of Yeshua as Messiah has meant the rejection of Israel as Adonai’s people. Some second and third century Gentile believers believed that the destruction of Jerusalem and the exile of the people was an indication of this rejection. Paul disagrees. He writes:
Isn’t it that they have stumbled with the result that they have permanently fallen away? Heaven forbids! Quite the contrary, it is by means of their stumbling that deliverance has come to the Gentiles, to provoke them to jealousy (Romans 11:11).
The apostle continues to argue that if Israel’s stumbling has meant so many riches to the Gentiles then how much greater riches will there be to the Gentiles when Israel receives Yeshua as Messiah? Kinzer expands on this theme with another sub–thesis that their rejection does not imply a nullification of Israel’s covenantal status nor the surrendering of the hope for an eschatological reversal of her rejection. If her rejection is not this, then what is its effect? It is a punishment or discipline. Punishment for the purpose of purification. Purification for what? For rejecting Yeshua as Messiah. The good news, however, as taught by Paul is that all of Israel will be saved
(Romans 11:26).
Another issue Kinzer addressed is what is the role of the Jewish people after 70 and 135 CE with the Roman exiles and their rejection of Yeshua as Messiah? He offers two roles: the continued presence of the Temple along with the Torah.
The primary function of the temple is to remind Jews, Messianic Jews, and Gentile believers of the divine presence (Shekinah) among his people. His presence, in human history, has been manifested in a variety of ways. Before the prideful disobedience of Adam and Eve, he was present in his creation for he made it. This presence takes on various forms in Israel with the construction of the Tabernacle as recorded in Exodus 25–31. It is written that They are to make me a sanctuary, so that I may live among them
(Exodus 25:8).
The key elements of this presence were the ark, the altar, the bread of presence, and the tabernacle. The ark served as the earthly throne of Israel’s God (I Samuel 4:4). In the first book of Samuel, it is recorded: "the ark for the covenant of Adonai of Hosts, who is present above the cherubim." This ark, within the wider sanctuary, was held in Shiloh. It was later that King David brought the ark to his newly established city Jerusalem, termed the city of David or of the Great King (see Psalm 48:3). But where in Jerusalem? According to the tradition that stretched back to Abraham, the place was Mount Moriah. Upon this mount, was built the first temple that, sadly, was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 BCE. The second temple was built in 516/515 BCE but also was destroyed by the Romans in 70 CE. So, what role did the temple play from 70 CE to the present?
According to Kinzer, the physical temple is a symbol pointing to realities beyond itself. These symbols consist of the temple as of heaven, of the cosmos, of the eschaton, and of the human. The heavenly temple is the holy of holies in heaven. It was the Essenes⁸ who accented this vision of the temple that consists of Adonai sitting on a high and lofty throne. The physical temple housed his robe while Serafim stood over him. His presence was awesome, and the angels shouted praises such as: "More holy than the holiest holiness is Adonai–T’zva’ot (Isaiah 6:3). Other images come from the Book of Revelation:
The one sitting there gleamed like diamonds and rubies, and a rainbow shining like emerald encircled the throne" (Revelation 4:3). An extended attempt to envision this divine presence is outlined in the prophet Ezekiel, Chapter One⁹.
The second symbol is the cosmic temple. This temple begins to be present in the creation narrative of Genesis 1–2. Adonai created the earth, the heavens, the cosmos to share his presence to the epitome of his creation: humans, male and female, made in his image (Genesis 2:27). In the mind of Isaiah, the creation is the effect of an infinite artist: "For thus Adonai, who created the heavens, God, who shaped and made the earth, who established and created it not to be chaos, but formed it to be lived in (45:18). There remains a promise of restoration and redemption for the whole of this cosmos for, Paul writes:
creation waits eagerly for the sons of God to be revealed (Romans 8:19) and
We know that until now, the whole creation has been groaning as with the pains of childbirth" (Romans 8:22).
The third symbol of the temple is eschatological. Ezekiel (40–48) envisions it reflecting a house of various gates, doors, and rooms with a special accent on the especially Holy Place
(41:4 and 41:23). The height of the vision is the coming of Adonai who filled the house
(43:5). A special feature of this temple is water flowing eastward from under its structure. It starts as a small stream but expands to become a mighty river. On both sides of the river all kinds of trees grow. In the river itself will dwell many varieties of fish. Part of the river will flow to the west of the Temple and the other to the east that will make the salty sea (The Dead Sea) like fresh water. The core of the temple is the same as the heavenly and cosmic kinds: the continued divine presence. Ezekiel concludes his prophetic message with this statement: "And from that day on the name of the city will be Adonai Shamah or ‘Adonai is there’" (Ezekiel 48: 35).
The last symbol of the temple is the human one. Very early in the history of Israel, while the people were still in the desert, the author of Numbers indicated "the camp where I (Adonai) live among you" (5:3). Israel is this temple, for Adonai did not forsake his people even after they did not accept Yeshua as Messiah. Paul teaches that God has not repudiated his people (Romans 11:1) and that they have not permanently fallen away (11:11). The gifts given to them have not been taken away. "They were made God’s children, the Shekinah has been with them, the covenants are theirs, likewise the giving of the Torah, the Temple service and the promises; and the Patriarchs are theirs" (Romans 9:4–5).
But how does this temple continue after its physical manifestation was destroyed in 70 CE? Rabbinic Judaism¹⁰ has a response. The synagogue becomes a concrete and physical structure. It is here, and in Jewish homes, that believers can study the Torah, pray towards Jerusalem, observe the festivals of the Jewish calendar, and celebrate life cycles. Kinzer writes: Israel as the human temple was thus linked not merely to the pre–70 CE institution, but even more to the transcendent realities to which it had pointed. As a result, the people of Israel obtained an extraordinary place in the universe and in the divine plan
(2018:78).
As indicated above, the second role that Israel plays in the post 70 CE history is the continued presence of the Torah. This term is referred to many times in this document. What does it mean? The authors of the Encyclopedia of Judaism offer us its meaning:
The Torah (Hebrew for teaching) refers to: sacred scripture, the five books of Moses (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy), oral law which includes the Talmud and all Jewish law (Karesh and Hurvitz, 2008:521–522).
As was the presence of the temple an important feature of post–exilic Israel, so also was the presence of the Torah. Kinzer argues that many Gentile Christian theologians deny the need for Torah observance based on Acts 10 to 11 (Peter’s dream–vision) and Acts 15 (no need to observe the Torah). He offers a different perspective.
By interpreting the infancy narratives, Yeshua’s life and teachings, the lives of the first disciples, and the life of Paul, Kinzer makes a strong point that all were Torah observant women and men. He especially accents Yesuha who said: "But it is easier for heaven and earth to pass away than for one stroke of a letter in the Torah to become void" (Luke 16:17) and:
Do not think that I have come to abolish the Torah or the prophets, I have come not to abolish but to complete. Yes, Indeed! I tell you that until heaven and earth pass away, not so much as a yud or a stroke will pass from the Torah—not until everything must happen has happened (Matthew 5:17–18).
Stern (2016) explains the verb to complete.
Yeshua came to teach Torah correctly, to affirm its fulness and truth, and to establish its intended meaning. This was so that Yeshua’s followers would know how to follow God.
As it was with Yeshua, so it was with Miriam, the mother of Yeshua, Joseph, her spouse, Zechariah, Elizabeth, Simeon, Anna, Stephen, and Paul. Kinzer accents both Miriam and Paul.
…His (Yeshua’s) mother should be seen and honored as ‘blessed,’ but wishes to focus less on the bodily life he derived from her and more on her faithful hearing of the divine word that made her worthy to bestow that life. Here Miriam becomes the paradigmatic disciple, hearing and performing the living word of the Torah (Kinzer, 2018:196).
Paul was also a serious observer of the Torah. He was committed to attend all the feasts of Israel, took a Nazirite vow, and made sure that his disciple, Timothy, was circumcised. Paul suffered much for he was accused of denying the Torah. In defense, however, he saw himself as a model Torah observer
What is another role of the Jew who does not accept the Messiahship of Yeshua? It is what the whole of the Tanakh has taught: to be a righteous Torah observer who lives blamelessly according to all the commandments and regulations of Adonai. This forms a basis for each Jew to continue to look to Jerusalem. In this way, the observant Jew contributes to the coming of the reign of Adonai and the Messianic Age.
To add to this important role, it is to the credit of Rabbinic Judaism, that the Torah has been preserved in its originality, the earth is seen to be the place of redemption, the teaching of the geographical centrality and the Messianic significance of the land of Israel, Jerusalem and that the Temple Mount. Jews have always, from ancient to present times, longed for the Messiah. This longing could very well coincide with the return of Yeshua to be discussed in Chapter Seven. Believers of Rabbinic Judaism and Yeshua both believe that one day the kingdom of Israel will be restored (Acts 1:6).
As many of these Jewish believers maintain hope and practice Torah observance for two–thousand years, two major processes happened within the Gentile church: acceptance of the gift of the Jews and her rejection. Kinzer expands. The Gentile Church, to its credit, kept the Tanakh as canonical, adhered to the fundamentals of the Apostle’s Creed, called more and more Gentiles to repent and believe in the message of the Messiah and practiced Baptism. She also created a way of life founded on apostolic teaching, communal sharing, and relationships, celebrating the Eucharist, liturgy and private prayer. Of all Christian traditions, Roman Catholicism is one which has maintained many of the Jewish traditions. Some of these are: the construction of a hierarchy of priests an established regular liturgical prayer like the Siddur¹¹, the celebration of feast days that always have a vigil the evening before, the presence of sacred bread, and the centralization of a tabernacle. Kinzer acknowledges: The ecclesia (church) guarded this rich treasure and kept it safe for generations through fierce storms, and we should be grateful for her faithful stewardship
(2018:235).
However, many of the treasures of the Jewish faith have not been received. Some of these treasures consist of the denial of an earthly Jerusalem, a disregard of the land of Israel as belonging to the Jews, the downplaying of the covenantal status of Israel, the suppression of Jewish rituals especially the Sabbath, a rejection of the church being composed both of Jewish and Gentile believers in Yeshua, and not accenting the role of Israel in the eschaton. There has not been an understanding of Adonai’s intent to establish on earth the reign of his Son in the land of Israel, with Jerusalem as the epicenter, that combined both Jewish and Gentile believers will experience unity.
However, as to be argued in Chapter Five, the Catholic Church has repented of much of her part in the many collective sins against Jews. This has come from the highest authority in the church in the documents of Nostrae aetate of the Vatican Council, The Catechism of the Catholic Church and A reflection on theological questions pertaining to the Catholic–Jewish relations on the 50th Anniversary of Nostra Aetate.
To summarize this section, I would accent a vision of not only salvation in Yeshua and the promise of eternal life with him but of Adonai’s intent to establish on earth the reign of his Son, with Jerusalem as the epicenter in the land of Israel. In this land, there will be combined both Jewish and Gentile believers in him as one new humanity
(Ephesians 2:15). Further, the role of Jewish believers during Israel’s long exile with their hope of the restored temple and their Torah observance is important in God’s plan for both Jewish and Gentile believers, all of humanity and the whole cosmos. It was also during this long exile that Yeshua’s suffering was joined with the suffering of the people of Israel. As he rose from the dead, so did Israel rise from the dead to complete the amazing and awesome plan of God.
BEING GRAFTED IN
The phrase being grafted in
needs some explanation. All peoples of the earth who are not of Jewish heritage are called Gentiles of the Nations.
Those who are disciples of Jesus are then Gentile believers in Jesus and if Jewish, the term to be used is Jewish believers in Yeshua. All the people in the New Testament (Br’it Hadashah or Books of the New Covenant) but also of Adonai’s intent to establish on earth the reign of his Son in the land of Israel, with Jerusalem as the epicenter, that combined both Jewish and Gentile believers
All persons of the