At the end of an era: a meditation on ecumenism, exile and gratitud.The practice of exile is deeply rooted in Jewish history Jewish history is the history of the Jewish people, faith, and culture. Since Jewish history encompasses nearly four thousand years and hundreds of different populations, any treatment can only be provided in broad strokes. , stretching back to ancient times and traversing context and place. Its backdrop has been forced dislocation, suffering and death. Today a new exile is being created and practiced, but this time against the backdrop of Jewish affluence and power. The Jewish exile of our time seeks to address the empowerment and expansion of Israel and the silence of Jewish leadership Jewish leadership has evolved over time. Since the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem in 70 CE, there has been no single body that has a leadership position over the entire Jewish diaspora. in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. in the face of that. Indeed, a civil war has broken out within the Jewish community over the issues of empowerment, expansion and silence, even as they become the central question of Jewish identity Jewish identity is the subjective state of perceiving oneself as as a Jew and as relating to being Jewish. Jewish identity, by this definition, does not depend on whether or not a person is regarded as a Jew by others, or by an external set of religious, or legal, or sociological , history and the future. Against the Jewish establishment in Israel and America, Jews of conscience speak boldly this truth: the dislocation, denigration den·i·grate tr.v. den·i·grat·ed, den·i·grat·ing, den·i·grates 1. To attack the character or reputation of; speak ill of; defame. 2. and destruction of Palestinians and Palestine bears the same consequences for Jewish life. For speaking this truth, Jews of conscience are exiled-within power and affluence--to a place beyond geographic designation and with out destination. It is an exile at the end of Jewish history as we have known and inherited it. There are many elements to this exile, some ironic, others paradoxical: Jews in exile are almost to the person completely secular, though, as it turns out, in a peculiarly Jewish way. Many of these Jews of conscience are within Israel or, reversing the theological claim of ingathering, have left Israel and enliven en·liv·en tr.v. en·liv·ened, en·liv·en·ing, en·liv·ens To make lively or spirited; animate. en·liv en·er n. the Jewish diaspora The Jewish diaspora (Hebrew: Tefutzah, "scattered", or Galut גלות, "exile", Yiddish: tfutses), the Jewish presence outside of the Land of Israel is a result of the expulsion of the Jewish people out of their land, during the . And yet the haunting question remains: are these secular Jews of conscience carrying the covenant into exile with them? Jewish academics, once denied employment and status, and programs of Jewish and Holocaust studies, only coming into being within the last decades, rather than critically evaluating Jewish power and ideology, are in the vanguard of disciplining Jewish dissenters dissenters: see nonconformists. , preventing their employment and censoring speech on campuses across the nation. Christian renewal in the West, so indebted to Jewish scripture and reflection on the Holocaust, has become silent on the Jewish civil war, and liberation theologians, including most feminist theologians, are more concerned about their own empire building--as it turns out the same kind of empires they correctly criticized their patriarchal foes for building and maintaining--than they are about Jews of conscience. In the academy the double standard toward women and people of color Noun 1. people of color - a race with skin pigmentation different from the white race (especially Blacks) people of colour, colour, color race - people who are believed to belong to the same genetic stock; "some biologists doubt that there are important now applies to Jews and often is enforced by those once-insurgent and now established women and persons of color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed. See also: Color . Name one Jewish thinker at a major academic institution involved in the study of religion who places the possibility of solidarity with the Palestinian people For other uses of "Palestinian", see Definitions of Palestine and Palestinian. Palestinian people (Arabic: الشعب الفلسطيني, at the center of his or her concern? Name one Jewish thinker at a prominent Christian seminary who thinks through and articulates the violence and militarism Militarism See also Soldiering. Adrastus leader of the Seven against Thebes. [Gk. Myth.: Iliad] Siegfried killed many enemies; led many troops to victory. [Ger. Lit. Nibelungenlied] that has come to be at the center of Jewish life or seeks a way of creating a future for Jews and Palestinians beyond the cycle of violence and atrocity? The ecumenical dialogue, once an avenue for Christian renewal, has become the ecumenical deal. The ecumenical deal is simple yet with profound implications: Jews demand that Christians in the West repent for the sin of antiJewishness; the main vehicle for Christian repentance is uncritical support for the state of Israel and its policies. Uncritical support for Israel renders Palestinians and Palestine invisible. Critique of Israel's policies vis-a-vis the Palestinian people is deemed anti-Jewish and a return to the previous understanding of Jews within Christian theology Noun 1. Christian theology - the teachings of Christian churches free grace, grace of God, grace - (Christian theology) the free and unmerited favor or beneficence of God; "God's grace is manifested in the salvation of sinners"; "there but for the grace of God go and practice. Conservative, moderate and radical Christian academics uphold this ecumenical deal. Though in private they may be critics of Israel, yet even amid the resentment and pressure exerted to enforce the ecumenical deal, they remain in public silent. The Holocaust has become a safe haven 1. Designated area(s) to which noncombatants of the United States Government's responsibility and commercial vehicles and materiel may be evacuated during a domestic or other valid emergency. 2. for Jews and Christians. Instead of raising questions about power and oppression, the Holocaust often becomes a barrier to speech and activity. For Jews, the Holocaust becomes a place of unaccountability un·ac·count·a·ble adj. 1. Impossible to account for; inexplicable: unaccountable absences. 2. , a fire-wall against critical thought; for Christians, the Holocaust becomes a place of silent retreat, excusing their silence, as another crime is committed in the name of the Holocaust. That Jews and Christians, worshiping the same God, sharing the Hebrew bible, and embracing a mutually binding covenant are working together to establish God's reign on earth, is, it turns out, more of a myth than a reality. Jews employed in universities and seminaries are for the most part used to lay a deeper and more expansive groundwork for Christians' belief. Thus Jews in the field of Hebrew bible, the study of Hebrew, medieval Jewry, even modern Judaism and Holocaust, are employed to romanticize ro·man·ti·cize v. ro·man·ti·cized, ro·man·ti·ciz·ing, ro·man·ti·ciz·es v.tr. To view or interpret romantically; make romantic. v.intr. To think in a romantic way. Jewish history as a vehicle for Christian renewal. Jewish innocence and suffering become a way for Christians to recover their innocence through repentance and self-sacrifice. Critical Jewish thought--especially about the evolving Constantinian Judaism of our time and use of Jewish religious imagery and identity to oppress op·press tr.v. op·pressed, op·press·ing, op·press·es 1. To keep down by severe and unjust use of force or authority: a people who were oppressed by tyranny. 2. another people and preserve a sense of innocence and purpose, the very same reality that Jews experienced under Constantinian Christianity and rightly criticized and rejected as hypocritical--is rejected by many Christian academics as an unwelcome and unnecessary intrusion into their religious enterprise. Jews of conscience feel this Christian self-involvement as a power against them and a betrayal. It confirms to Jews that Christians have used them in the past for their own sense of triumphalism tri·umph·al·ism n. The attitude or belief that a particular doctrine, especially a religion or political theory, is superior to all others. tri·umph and now Christians use them to buttress a sense of humility and innocence. Jews were defined and are defined today in the Christian imagination and for Christian needs. As persons and as a community, in their beauty and limitations, Jews are not important enough to Christians to speak boldly and unequivocally about what is being done to the Palestinians and to the Jewish community itself. Hence Jews are not with Christians; they are alone. The double standard relating to relating to relate prep → concernant relating to relate prep → bezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc Jews is everywhere and functions in important ways for Jews and Christians. Consider the recent statement by a number of Jewish academics from major universities on the relevance of Christians and Christianity to Jews and Judaism, proposed as a re-evaluation of Jewish/Christian relationships, "Dabru Emet The Dabru Emet (Heb. דברו אמת "Speak [the] Truth") is a document concerning the relationship between Christianity and Judaism. It was signed by over 120 rabbis from all branches of Judaism. [Speaking the Truth]: A Jewish Statement on Christians and Christianity." There is a fundamental validity to the statement: post-Holocaust Christians and Christianity are in the main positive toward Jews and Judaism. Jews have entered a new era where Jews are accepted by Christians and Jews must admit this "truth." Accusations of Christian anti-semitism must in the main be dropped as we travel together into a new era. Thus Judaism and Jews must re-imagine our Jewishness in a more positive light. So it is true, and for the most part accepted, that Jews and Christians worship the same God; that a new relationship between Jews and Christians will not weaken Jewish practice; that Jews and Christians must work together for justice and peace. Yet here also is another more controversial statement: "Christians can respect the claim of the Jewish people upon the land of Israel" with the following explanation: The most important event for Jews since the Holocaust has been the reestablishment of a Jewish state in the Promised Land. As members of a biblically based religion, Christians appreciate that Israel was promised--and given--to Jews as the physical center of the covenant between them and God. Many Christians' support of the State of Israel is far more profound than mere politics. As Jews we applaud this support. We also recognize that Jewish tradition mandates justice for all non-Jews who reside in a Jewish state. This statement and explanation are remarkable for a variety of reasons and deserve a longer discussion than I am able to offer here. But think of the biblical claims--of promise and covenant for example--that these Jews might be willing to accept from Christians. Are Jews willing to accept the Christian claim, all within the New Testament and Christian history, that the promised messiah of the Hebrew bible came forth and was rejected by Jews? That a new Israel New Israel is a religion that separated itself from a religions sect Old Israel which is type of Christianity in the beginning of the 20th century. It differs from mainstream Christianity in a number of ways. has come into being and that the old Israel is in need of awakening to the truth of that messiah? Will Jews accept the importance, at least as interpreted by many biblically based Christians, of evangelizing Jews so that the "valid" promises of the Second Coming can commence? Jon D. Levenson, the Albert A. list Professor of Jewish Studies Jewish studies also known as Judaic studies is a subject area of study available at many colleges and universities in North America. Traditionally, Jewish studies was part of the natural practice of Judaism by Jews. at Harvard Divinity School Harvard Divinity School is one of the constituent schools of Harvard University, located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the United States. The School's purpose is to train graduate students—either in the academic study of religion, or in the practice of a religious ministry. , is a critic of this statement and asserts it so boldly in his essay "How Not to Conduct Jewish-Christian Dialogue" in the December 2001 issue of Commentary. The importance of this essay is the conservative nature of Levenson's response, a main issue being how such understandings found in Dabru Emet lead to misunderstandings about the essential differences between Judaism and Christianity, and even to intermarriage in·ter·mar·ry intr.v. in·ter·mar·ried, in·ter·mar·ry·ing, in·ter·mar·ries 1. To marry a member of another group. 2. To be bound together by the marriages of members. 3. and assimilation. Beyond the specific critique of the document, what is remarkable is that a professor with Levenson's views occupies the first and only chair in Jewish Studies at Harvard Divinity, that his major field of scholarship is Hebrew bible, and that his biblical peer in New Testament at Harvard Divinity is Elisabeth Schussler Fiorenza. That the only chair in Jewish Studies at Harvard Divinity is in Hebrew bible and ancient and medieval Judaism is predictable within the ecumenical deal; that he is an academic and political conservative is of interest as well. But the ecumenical deal is more complicated, as Schussler Fiorenza's radically expansive understanding of the biblical canon also contributes, albeit unwittingly, to the ecumenical deal. Progressive contemporary Jewish thought, the center of which is the issue of Israel and the Palestinians, fares little better here. In Schussler Fiorenza's ggoundbreaking work, In Memory of Her: A Feminist Theological Reconstruction of Christian Origins, Jews are present and Jesus is presented, quite correctly I think, as part of a renewal movement within Judaism. She also co-edited a Concilium volume, "The Holocaust as Interruption" (vol. 175). In neither of these works is there mentioned the work of Jewish theologians and others who take a recovery of Judaism and the event of Holocaust as impossible w ithout naming the violence that continues in the name of Israel and the Jewish people. This is true with a fellow Cambridge citizen at the Episcopal Divinity School Episcopal Divinity School, or EDS, is an Episcopal seminary in Cambridge, Massachusetts, offering Master of Divinity, Master of Arts in Theological Studies, and Doctor of Ministry degrees. , Carter Heyward. She, too, speaks beautifully of the need to recover the Jewish sense of covenant and questioning in the biblical witness and through the Holocaust. Yet in her work, Jewish writing seems to end with Elie Wiesel, a person who is conspicuously silent on the Palestinian question. Is it any different with the incredibly productive and prominent Biblical scholar Walter Brueggemann Walter Brueggemann (b. 1933) is an Old Testament scholar and author who lives in Georgia in the United States. Born in Nebraska and raised in Missouri, the son of a German Evangelical pastor, Brueggemann received his Bachelor's Degree from Elmhurst College and doctorates from Eden ? Brueggemann's entire career has seen him relating the prophetic in the Hebrew bible to contemporary life and yet one looks in vain for any application to this most difficult issue of Israel and the Palestinians. And let us not forget seminary institutions like Union Theological in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. , whose central focus over the last decades has been liberation theology liberation theology, belief that the Christian Gospel demands "a preferential option for the poor," and that the church should be involved in the struggle for economic and political justice in the contemporary world—particularly in the Third World. . Though located strategically across the street from the Jewish Theological Seminary, the prophetic word on an issue of global importance seems unable to be spoken. Through the years there has been silence and more silence, until the silence itself becomes a statement testifying to the extraordinary power of the ecumenical deal. Does this reticence simply mean a respect for Jews to decide their own fate? Or does it relate to a fear of appearing anti-semitic? Is this silence an attempt to escape the controversy that might come if these great scholars and interpreters of the Jewish and Christian traditions actually spoke out on behalf of the Palestinian and Jewish people? This double standard, extending to those Christians who continue to mention Jews in their theological work, a dwindling dwin·dle v. dwin·dled, dwin·dling, dwin·dles v.intr. To become gradually less until little remains. v.tr. To cause to dwindle. See Synonyms at decrease. number almost exclusively dealing with the bible and the Holocaust, deepens the Jewish exile. It hastens the end of Jewish history as we have known and inherited it. It means that the only acceptable form of Jewish discourse in the academy and in public is a discourse that has at its center a fundamental hypocrisy. That is why the witness of Rosemary Ruether is so important and why I speak of her retirement from Garrett-Evangelical as the end of an era. There are many reasons to so label Ruether's retirement, but here I will speak only about the ecumenical front and what this means to me What This Means to Me is the third release by hardcore punk band xLooking Forwardx. It was first released in 2004. It was later re-issued in 2007 on Blood and Ink Records. as a Jew and as a person. For there is no one who has been more consistent in her voice and being, simultaneously opposing Christian anti-semitism and Jews becoming oppressors; no one who investigated Christianity more deeply and broadly while being open to Jews who were conducting similar investigations as co-workers in an enterprise that sought a broader tradition of faith and struggle. With Ruether there has been little hesitation to address the end of Jewish innocence, because she pursued the end of Christian innocence with such vigor and honesty. But there has been little hesitation also because she never feared that her pursuit of integrity as a Christian was fundamentally different than the Jewish pursuit of integrity. And I think as important is the fact that Ruether never tried to build an empire around her being and thought: on the move, she has consistently expanded her terrain of embrace rather than sought to enhance and protect her turf. As it turns out, neither feminists nor feminism are immune to empire building by currying favor with the Jewish establishment. Certainly exilic Jews know how many feminists have turned their back on this question and on those who bring to light questions of justice with regard to the Palestinians. I have experienced this often, sometimes on the very campuses where academics teach whom I have hosted on the issue on feminism in difficult and presumably pre·sum·a·ble adj. That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster. closed settings like Maryknoll and Baylor. Ruether's consistency is legendary and there is no greater test today than the Palestinian question. That era, the era of consistency, is coming to an end; perhaps "era" is an exaggeration. When the test came, it seems that only one person was up for it, at least over the long haul Long distance. Long haul implies traversing a state or a country. Contrast with short haul. . And for me personally that has made a tremendous difference even in my exile. For those turned backs serve as a sign of contradiction Sign of contradiction is a term in Catholic theology which refers to certain persons who, upon manifesting holiness, are subject to extreme opposition. The term is from the biblical phrase "sign that is spoken against" found in Luke 2:34 and in Acts 28:22, which refer to Jesus , of distance of relation and possibility, of being consigned to an oblivion that is shared in different ways with Palestinians themselves. Welcoming Jews as if Palestinians do not exist is no different than welcoming men as if women do not exist. No matter the protestations, it is the same. There is, though, a difference between a hard and soft exile. To be faithful today as a Jew is to be in exile, but the soft exile is infinitely preferable and even achievable. Unlike some of your friends, even those here to honor you today, you never turned your back. There was never an excuse of academic field or empire. Thus I call you a friend of the Jewish people and my friend, a fellow traveler, and for that I am grateful. Alone--surely among the very few--you help me refuse a cynicism that is easy to embrace. Who among us is absent that temptation? Cynicism is the easy path when compared to the journey within and among the contradictions of life. I hope always to choose the path of possibility and hope, especially when the hour is late and when an era, so defined by your presence, comes to an end. In memory I will always be within that era, even as I hope to pass that legacy on to those who come after. This paper was first presented at Theology, Ecology, and Feminism' a conference honoring Rosemary Radford Ruether Rosemary Radford Ruether (b. 1936) is a renowned feminist scholar and theologian, who is married to the political scientist Herman Ruether. They have three children and reside in California. at Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary G-ETS was formed in 1974 when the Garrett Theological Seminary in Evanston merged with the Evangelical Theological Seminary in Naperville, Illinois (both U. M. schools). The merged school occupied the Garrett campus. , April 3-4, 2002. Marc H. Ellis Marc H. Ellis, was born in Miami, Florida in 1952. He earned B.A. and M.A. degrees at Florida State University, where he studied under Richard Rubenstein and William Miller. He received his doctorate in contemporary social and religious thought from Marquette University in 1980. is University Professor of American and Jewish Studies and Director of the Center for American and Jewish Studies at Baylor University. His most recent books include Practicing Exile: The Religious Odyssey of an American Jew and Israel and Palestine: Out of the Ashes; The Search for Jewish Identity in the Twenty-first Century. |
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