Continued from last week
So, here’s my theory: We are born as pretty selfish little creatures. From the very beginning there is a battle going on inside us. The image of God, the perfect, selfless, sacrificial God of Love in whose image we are made is at odds with the brokenness and failure that seem to be our inheritance.
What does St Paul say in Romans 7? “For in my inner being I delight in God’s law, but I see another law at work in me, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin at work within me.”
That pretty much sums up the human condition. I know what’s good. I do what’s bad. If I allow the selfishness in me to take over my being, when I die, that’s pretty much who I will be forever. Eternal aloneness. Just me. Forever. Maybe the first few eons would be tolerable, but eventually even I would get bored with myself. The good news is that this eternal aloneness is actually quite avoidable.
C.S. Lewis has the devil complaining that God is such a sophist. He will save a person on the flimsiest grounds. Why, even good intentions are taken into account! As St. Augustine puts it “To wish to go is to go.” In other words, all one must do is honestly admit that he has failed and needs God, and God will teach him how to fall in love with God. It may take some time, but if I admit that I need help and ask the Lord to change my heart, then I can spend eternity at an unending wedding feast. Not only that, I am not just a guest, I am somehow part of the bride and groom. The joy of one’s own wedding is just the crudest analogy. Heaven is more than we can imagine. So, it’s up to me. Heaven or hell. The wedding feast or the outer darkness. There is, however, a problem. To be happily married one must fall in love; really fall in love, selflessly head over heels crazy in love. Otherwise even a wedding feast can be a bit of a trial.
If you’ve ever fallen in love, I mean really in love, the only thing that matters is the other. To love is to allow yourself to forget yourself. I remember a fellow who drove about a hundred miles every day just to have lunch with his girlfriend who was in college. To you it seems nuts. To him it seemed reasonable.
I remember another story of a young man who married his high school sweetheart. Not long after the wedding she was injured in a terrible accident and was unable to use her arms and legs. She had also suffered some mental impairment. The years passed and he loved her no less. Every Sunday he would dress her in her finest and bring her to church. This continued as the young man slowly became an old one. A new pastor came to the parish and was told the story of the old couple who never missed Mass together, and once as church was letting out, the pastor said to the old man, “I so admire your sacrifice.”
The old man looked very confused, and said, “What sacrifice?”
The priest returned, “Well, every Sunday for as long as anyone can remember, you have dressed your wife in her Sunday best, and brought her here to church. It must be a great sacrifice for you to have done this all years.”
The old man looked shocked and said, “Father, it was no sacrifice! I love her.”
You see, true sacrificial love doesn’t notice that it is sacrificial. To live for God, to die for God, when one perceives the beauty of God there is no sacrifice. How often we hear stories of martyrs rejoicing on their way to death, singing and laughing. It is as if they are on the way to a wedding, which in fact, they are. But I, sinner that I am, count the cost and begrudge every little inconvenience that my relationship with God entails. I count the cost down to the penny. The amazing thing is that God loves me so much that He will make excuses for me if only I let him do so.
Therein lies the rub! There are people who would love to go to heaven, if they didn’t have to fall in love to do so. They have decided that they are the only person in their life really worth loving. Oh sure, they might desire another person, but they desire another person the way one might want a toy or an amusement. When the other is no longer amusing, they move on to the next recreation. There are people who have children in our times, as if somehow children were an accessory to the good life. As soon as things get tough, they find someone to do the heavy lifting for them. Some people don’t even bother with children. They convince themselves that the moral thing to do is get a pet and not burden the world with another human being.
The craze for pets in our times is astonishing. Now mind you, one of my best friends is a dog, but she is a dog. She has an owner, not a pet parent. We do not celebrate her birthday, nor does she get spa treatments. When one looks down the pet aisle in a grocery store, one cannot help but notice that things have gotten a bit out of control. Pets are wonderful. All that compassion and affection and they ask so very little…… That’s a great thing for people who want to give little. (Please don’t get too huffy about this. This does not apply to you. You have a perfectly healthy relationship with your Lhasa Apso/Rottweiler mixed-breed or your eighteen cats.)
The first step to heaven is the confession of sin. The word confess means to admit or agree. What are we agreeing with? Simple: We are agreeing with God’s opinion that we are not perfect. We have failed. We are sinners. Here is a bit of a problem. In the modern world we are trained to admit no such thing. It’s not our fault. Everyone is a winner. We give awards to everyone who runs the race. Competitive sports are frowned on in progressive schools. Medals and trophies are handed out like Kleenex lest anyone be offended. It’s not my fault! Since the groundbreaking work of Sigmund Freud we have the luxury of explaining everything away as the result of poor potty training or being frightened by a circus clown at the age of three. It’s not my fault that I am an axe murderer. I just developed a fondness for sharp objects because Poppa once cut himself while shaving and asked me to go get a band aid.
It’s not my fault that I am a sinner. I really have no free will. I can’t resist the compulsion to pick the wings off flies and throw cats out the window. God made me who I am. It’s His fault. God has got a lot to answer for. Poor people and sick children and concentration camps and freight trains stopped at railroad crossings in heavy traffic! Who does God think He is to judge me? If there actually is a God, He is going to have to explain a few things when I get my hands on Him. How dare He? God is just going to have to get over Himself and get with the times.
If I am right that narcissism is the sure fire way to go to hell, then the current age may be the very school of hell. We have our 1.8 children all of whom are definitely above average and all of whom are so gorgeous that parents are sure they should all have made a fortune modeling for baby food commercials. We convince our kids that the universe was somehow incomplete until they arrived. And guess what? The little prima donnas believe us. They walk around with their electronic devices taking pictures of themselves and wondering why the world doesn’t realize that they are geniuses who should never actually have to do an honest day’s work. They are unable to commit themselves to hard work or to stable relationships, like marriage and parenthood.
Hell may have no one in it, but it seems that a lot of people are applying for entrance these days. I have heard that all you have in heaven is what you gave away on earth, and conversely, all the useless stuff you cling to will eventually drag you down to hell.
Freedom? What was God thinking when He gave us freedom? Shouldn’t God make us happy whether we want to be happy or not, just like our parents try to do? Isn’t it His job to give us all the stuff we want just like mommy and daddy and daddy’s new boyfriend so we won’t be sad? Shouldn’t He support us when we shack up with our significant other and not mention the word sin? After all, we wouldn’t want Him to hurt our feelings. Jesus never hurt anyone’s feelings. (For the humor impaired, this is sarcasm.)
I think Bishop Barron is quite correct. He says that since freedom is essential for love, hell must exist. If there is no chance to say “No!” to God’s love and forgiveness, there can be neither love nor forgiveness. You cannot be forced to love. We may well hope there is no one in hell, but Bishop Barron, whom I regard as a very great man and quite possibly a genius, is quite correct. There is a hell. And it is quite possible that I might end up there if I don’t admit my need for God and ask Him to change my heart.
Rev. Know-it-all
A Catholic priest responds to queries on faith, the Bible, religion, Catholic practice, etc. posed by readers. What he doesn't know, he makes up.
Saturday, August 29, 2015
Sunday, August 23, 2015
Didn't we do away with hell? part 2
Continued from last week….
I have heard it said that the Catholic Doctrine of original sin is the most obviously true of all its doctrines. Remember what sin is. In its root meaning, the Greek word “hamartia” is a term that comes from the world of sports. It simply means to miss the target. Were I shooting arrows for example, and missed the target, I would say, were I an ancient Greek, “Oh! I’ve sinned!!” (Of course I would say it in ancient Greek.)
The New Testament, I maintain written by the Holy Spirit, gives a moral connotation to a common word. “I have failed.” In the New Testament this means that I have failed morally. Is there a person alive who thinks that it’s all good? Everything we do seems motivated by and riddled with failure. We are not happy. So we make a lot of money. We are still not happy. We are not happy. We go from bed to bed, intimacy to intimacy. We are still not happy. It seems that the best we can do is to keep busy. We keep trying failed strategies; “If only I had a little more money, a little more sex, a little more time, a little more sleep, a little more TV, a better car, a bigger house, nicer furniture….then I would be happy.
I am a history geek. I love to watch videos of war as the war is ending. The end of war is for me the ultimate happy ending; the slave being set free; the tyrant perishing; the veteran returning home; the prisoner surviving the concentration camp. Face it, happy endings aren’t really part of the story.
People of African descent were re-enslaved by the Jim Crow laws; the ousted tyrant is usually replaced by a new tyrant; the veteran returns home and faces alienation from his family and post-traumatic stress disorder; and the few Jews who were released from concentration camps were pretty much abandoned by the world. They returned to their homes and found other people living in them.
I remember the story of a Jew who returned to his old village home only to find a local man occupying it. The local said, "You’re here for money you’ve hidden!”
The survivor said, “No, I don’t want to move back. I just want to see the old home.”
The squatter refused to let the Jew back into his old home. After the Jew went away the man systematically destroyed the house looking for the treasure he was convinced the Jews had hidden in the walls, and ultimately the house was destroyed and abandoned. The Jew was met only with sorrow after his liberation and the squatter was destroyed by wanting more than he had already been able to steal.
We seem designed for unhappiness. We fight horrible injustice only to replace injustice with injustice. St. Paul sums it up pretty well:
Jesus has a completely different approach to the whole matter. “He who loves his life loses it, and he who hates his life in this world will keep it to life eternal.” (John 12:25) This sounds crazy. It’s like the thing about turning the car’s steering wheel in the direction of the skid on an icy road. It sounds crazy. Crazy, but it works if done right. We in the world are already crazy. Maybe we should try Jesus’ advice. What we are doing now doesn’t work.
What can Jesus possibly mean when he tells us to hate our lives so we might gain it? I think C.S. Lewis explains it nicely in the 14th chapter of the Screwtape Letters:
In the beauty of Christ’s love on the cross you can find a happiness that will not go sour.
Next week, more hell.
I have heard it said that the Catholic Doctrine of original sin is the most obviously true of all its doctrines. Remember what sin is. In its root meaning, the Greek word “hamartia” is a term that comes from the world of sports. It simply means to miss the target. Were I shooting arrows for example, and missed the target, I would say, were I an ancient Greek, “Oh! I’ve sinned!!” (Of course I would say it in ancient Greek.)
The New Testament, I maintain written by the Holy Spirit, gives a moral connotation to a common word. “I have failed.” In the New Testament this means that I have failed morally. Is there a person alive who thinks that it’s all good? Everything we do seems motivated by and riddled with failure. We are not happy. So we make a lot of money. We are still not happy. We are not happy. We go from bed to bed, intimacy to intimacy. We are still not happy. It seems that the best we can do is to keep busy. We keep trying failed strategies; “If only I had a little more money, a little more sex, a little more time, a little more sleep, a little more TV, a better car, a bigger house, nicer furniture….then I would be happy.
I am a history geek. I love to watch videos of war as the war is ending. The end of war is for me the ultimate happy ending; the slave being set free; the tyrant perishing; the veteran returning home; the prisoner surviving the concentration camp. Face it, happy endings aren’t really part of the story.
People of African descent were re-enslaved by the Jim Crow laws; the ousted tyrant is usually replaced by a new tyrant; the veteran returns home and faces alienation from his family and post-traumatic stress disorder; and the few Jews who were released from concentration camps were pretty much abandoned by the world. They returned to their homes and found other people living in them.
I remember the story of a Jew who returned to his old village home only to find a local man occupying it. The local said, "You’re here for money you’ve hidden!”
The survivor said, “No, I don’t want to move back. I just want to see the old home.”
The squatter refused to let the Jew back into his old home. After the Jew went away the man systematically destroyed the house looking for the treasure he was convinced the Jews had hidden in the walls, and ultimately the house was destroyed and abandoned. The Jew was met only with sorrow after his liberation and the squatter was destroyed by wanting more than he had already been able to steal.
We seem designed for unhappiness. We fight horrible injustice only to replace injustice with injustice. St. Paul sums it up pretty well:
“For the good that I want, I do not do, but I practice the very evil that I do not want, so I find this law at work. Although I want to do good, evil is right there with me. For in my inner being I delight in God’s law, but I see another law at work in me, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin at work within me. What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body that is subject to death? Thanks be to God, who delivers me through Jesus Christ our Lord!” (Romans, 7th Chapter)We are a mess, personally and politically. We want peace, but make war. We want harmony but we argue. We want love but we pick at each other finding fault. The great humor of the current age is that the “tolerant” increasingly lodge civil and even criminal charges against the “intolerant.” We all have a sense of failure in a failed world, and think that if we just tried a little harder, if we just lowered our moral standards a little, if we could just fight the war to end all wars. Remember one of the definitions of insanity: “keep doing what you’ve always done but this time, expect different results.”
Jesus has a completely different approach to the whole matter. “He who loves his life loses it, and he who hates his life in this world will keep it to life eternal.” (John 12:25) This sounds crazy. It’s like the thing about turning the car’s steering wheel in the direction of the skid on an icy road. It sounds crazy. Crazy, but it works if done right. We in the world are already crazy. Maybe we should try Jesus’ advice. What we are doing now doesn’t work.
What can Jesus possibly mean when he tells us to hate our lives so we might gain it? I think C.S. Lewis explains it nicely in the 14th chapter of the Screwtape Letters:
“(God) wants to kill their animal self-love as soon as possible; but it is His long-term policy, I fear, to restore to them a new kind of self-love, a charity and gratitude for all selves, including their own; when they have really learned to love their neighbors as themselves, they will be allowed to love themselves as their neighbors. For we must never forget what is the most repellent and inexplicable trait in our Enemy (God); He really loves the hairless bipeds He has created and always gives back to them with His right hand what He has taken away with His left.”This is what I mean by saying that God doesn’t send us to hell; He finds us there. We are in love with ourselves, and thus unable to love ourselves. There is a wonderful song “Turn your eyes upon Jesus, Look full in His wonderful face, and the things of earth will grow strangely dim, in the light of His glory and grace.”
In the beauty of Christ’s love on the cross you can find a happiness that will not go sour.
Next week, more hell.
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Didn't we dio away with hell?
Dear Rev. Know-it-all,
My pastor delivered a sermon on hell
a few weeks ago that really burned me up. I thought that we had abandoned the
outmoded concept of hell. Are we going to return to the medieval practice of
frightening people into the church?
Didn’t they just make some guy a bishop who says there is no hell? Enough with the depressing sermons!
Yours,
Lou Gubrious
Dear Lou,
You’re talking about Bishop-Elect Robert
Barron, a great theologian and all around good guy. You need to stop
getting your religion from TV news. They can barely read the instructions on
the hair spray bottle. Fr. (soon to be bishop) Barron was talking about the
virtue of hope. You can hear what he had
to say by doing a web search for Fr. Robert Barron on
“Whether Hell is Crowded or Empty” on Youtube. He does a masterly job of
explaining the theological and philosophical need for the existence of hell to
a generation that rejects the idea. He points out that it was good and gentle
Jesus who speaks most about hell in the Bible. He correctly says that the
Church has never definitively put any human being in hell, and we can hope for
universal salvation. Just don’t count on it!
We still believe in the reality of
hell. Read the catechism. “The teaching of the Church affirms the existence of
hell and its eternity. Immediately after death the souls of those who die in a
state of mortal sin descend into hell, where they suffer the punishments of
hell, eternal fire. The chief punishment of hell is eternal separation from
God, in whom alone man can possess the life and happiness for which he was
created and for which he longs.” (Paragraph 1035)
How can a good and loving God ever
send anyone to hell? Bishop elect Barron says, “God doesn’t send anyone to
hell. We send ourselves to hell.” I
would put it differently. God doesn’t
send anyone to hell. He finds us there!
Ever heard of original sin?
Original sin is the alienation from God in which we are born.
I can hear you say, “That’s nonsense!
Babies are sweet and innocent.”
Obviously you are not a parent. Babies
are original sinners. Babies have a certain cry that can penetrate brick. I am
not saying that a baby’s cry is sinful. A baby cries because it is his only way
to communicate. The crying is not sinful, but it does indicate the neediness
and aloneness that is the basic human state.
An infant is aware of mother’s love and of his own need. Every human
being is made in the image of God and at the same time is born into the world
in a state of alienation from the God whose image he bears.
There is, I believe, a struggle in
every human being from the moment of conception between love and selfishness. I
know that babies are sinful, even if not culpable (a fancy word meaning worthy
of blame). I am a former baby. My earliest documentable memory takes me back to
my grandmother’s funeral 1953, when I was 3 years and 3 months old. I was so
obnoxious at the first night of the wake that I was not going to the second
night of the wake. I can remember my parents putting on coats and hats as I
realized that I was to be left behind. I was furious! I was going to make them
suffer. I can still remember my mother’s pained expression through the window
of the back door. She thought I, poor baby, was suffering. On the contrary, I
was angry and wanted them to suffer. I was a little original sinner.
I have an earlier memory than that. I
remember my little white baby shoes and the wonderful noise they made when
banged on the church pew. My parents were in a dither trying to get me to stop.
For quite a while thereafter they went to different Masses while one of them
stayed home to do guard duty over the little narcissist (me).
A newborn’s cry is a result of that
newborn’s immaturity, but it can become an indicator of human selfishness,
though an infant is certainly not morally culpable. A baby, at least one like me, learns to lie
before he learns to talk. A baby has
that certain cry that will bring mommy and daddy running. One does the diaper
test. Nothing. One tries to feed the baby. Nothing. All that baby wants is for mommy to hold him.
This is not a bad thing in itself. It is a longing for relationship, a good
thing. Still, it matters not to the
light of your eyes that daddy and mommy must be up at 5 AM to begin the struggle
all over. As long as he has a bottle in his mouth, a change of clothes and
mommy to hold him, junior is fine. I know old men who, if they have a bottle in
their mouth, a change of clothes and mommy to hold them, they are just fine.
My point is this; the cry of a baby
is evidence of and a protest against the fundamental aloneness into which we
are born. In a baby it is appropriate. It is not so appropriate in whiny old
men like me. My suspicion is that when
we die, time simply stops. We become timeless, eternal. If when we die we have
not accepted the grace of God, and grown out our essential aloneness, that is
who we are forever, the self-centered sons of our mothers that we were born.
Jesus calls hell the outer darkness
where there is weeping and gnashing of teeth. Heaven is a wedding banquet.
God’s grace finds us in an outer darkness.
If we admit our need, our infant cry, as it were, He is generous. The
Scripture says that God does not wish the death of a sinner, but as Fr. Barron
points out, he will not override our freedom.
We must, in the end choose love or hate, light or dark, God or
ourselves. 1 Timothy 2:4, (God) “…wants
all people to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth.” And again,
Ezekiel 33:11, “Say to them, 'As surely as I live, declares the Sovereign LORD,
I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that they turn from
their ways and live.’” God seems to
agree with Fr. Barron here. We can hope for universal salvation, but we darn
well better not count on it.
There really is a hell. I’ve met
people who have been there. If you are at all decent you shouldn’t want your
worst enemy to go there. I remember well the first person I met who claims to
have gone to hell. He was only about 18 years old, and already a horrible human
being. He was a drug dealer and general low life. He overdosed on his own
product, and found himself all alone and sinking into blackness. His family
were all devout believers and an ocean of prayer was being offered for him. He
told me that he saw Jesus in the distance standing in light. He cried out “Give
me another chance!” and woke up on the emergency room gurney. He said yes to
grace and was able to turn his life around.
Another story of hell was told me by
a good friend, also from a devout family. He, however, was not so devout. He
was a great fancier of recreational pharmaceuticals, which he also sold. He was
a purveyor of used cars, though without their owners’ permission and quite a
few other unsavory occupations. (For the humor impaired: He was a drug dealer,
addict and car thief.) I was at a family gathering and some of the children
asked me about life after death. I was sharing stories of people I know who
claim to have seen heaven.
My above mentioned friend chimed in,
“That’s all b@#$%^!t. When you’re dead, you’re dead. I know. I died.” He found me a little later and said, “What I
said wasn’t true. I was in hell.”
All of us have heard stories of the
light and the tunnel etc. etc. It seems that very few people report hell. I
once read that only about one out five people who lose vital signs report
anything, and these are generally positive. BUT…I remember hearing the story of
a doctor whose patient had a heart attack in his office. It took a few attempts
to get him stabilized. Every time the pulse returned and the patient was
conscious, he would shout, “Get me out of here! I’m burning in hell!” The doctor, an atheist, was quite shaken, and
when he visited his patient in the hospital he asked, “What was all this about
burning in hell?” The patient just looked at the doctor and said, “What do you
mean? I was unconscious. I don’t remember anything about hell.”
It hit the doctor like a ton of
bricks. If the death experience was unpleasant it was repressed. He began to ask people he revived about their
experience as soon as possible, and he was able to double the number of people
who had experiences and quite a few more were negative. This is not good
science, and not good theology, but it is interesting. Hypothetically, if these
things are what they appear to be, there are a lot of people going to hell.
Next week: Try to look on the bright
side.
Friday, August 7, 2015
What have you got against Jews?
N.B. TO
UNDERSTAND THIS YOU MUST KNOW THAT PHARISEE IS A NOBLE WORD. PHARISEES WERE AND
REMAIN DEFENDERS OF THE TRUTHS OF JUDAISM IN A DIFFICULT AND HOSTILE WORLD.
Dear
Rev. Know-it-all,
I just
located your Father Know-it-all site. What’s with you and Jews? You talk about
the decrease in the Jewish population of the Roman world, attributing it to
conversion to Christianity, without mention of the two great Jewish rebellions
which led to the death and expulsion of a large part of the Jewish population.
This, of course, was followed by Christians obtaining political power with
Constantine which wasn’t so good for Jews either. As I indicated in an earlier
e-mail, I sense a pattern of unfavorable comments about Jews.
Yours,
Beth
K. Nesset
Dear
Beth,
Well,
this is a first. I am usually criticized for being too semito-philic. What’s
with me and the Jews? I think the Jews are very important to the culture, so I
am always trying to fine tune my understanding of the history of a rather
troubled relationship. I don’t know your ethnic and religious background, but
would like to tell you a story.
I have
a dear friend who is an ultra-orthodox rabbi. He likes me because I am
orthodox, even if I’m not Jewish. His daughter was being married on a Sunday,
and because I work Sundays, I couldn’t attend the wedding. So the rabbi invited
me to Shabbos dinner to meet the
in-laws. The groom’s uncle, a true Tsaddik,
(righteous man) was there. He heads an anonymous charity for mothers in
trouble. I was about to pour him a glass of wine, and I stopped myself because
I realized that if it was yayin
(wine) he couldn’t drink it if I had poured it. Were it mevushal, (cooked wine, or wine sweetened by a boiling process) it
would be no problem if served by a gentile.
I said
to the Tsaddik, “I don’t know if I
can pour this for you. I have to see if it’s…”
He
looked utterly flabbergasted and said, “I don’t know! I’ve never been in this
situation before!!!”
He was
astonished by the whole thing. He had never had a religious conversation with a
gentile and certainly not with a galleck
(Catholic Priest) and there we were, talking about the same things,
righteousness, the nature of Messiah, the Scriptures and so on. He was amazed,
and frankly so was I.
I
realized that we were co-religionists. We did not share the same faith, but we
did share the same religion. The moral and ethical concepts, the understanding
we shared about much of the nature of the Almighty, even customs such as the
washing of hands and the blessing of bread and wine, the prayers and psalms and
chants, the hope of Messiah. We shared all these to some degree. We were
playing in the same ball park, as it were.
What
we did not share completely were faith and our understanding the nature of
Torah (the Law). I regarded the whole Hebrew Scripture as fully inspired. He
regarded Torah as preeminent, and of course he did not regard the New Testament
as inspired at all, but was surprised to find that I do not consider the New
Testament more inspired than Hebrew Scriptures. Talmud,
along with Torah, was his whole life. Talmud is not mine though Old Testament – better called Hebrew Scriptures – most certainly is. His great trust is in
Talmud and Torah. My trust is in Jesus of Nazareth, a Jew whom I believe to be
the visible image of the invisible God, the Torah come to life! (c.f. St.
Paul’s first letter to the Colossians, chapter one, verse 15)
Nonetheless,
it was a transformative conversation for me. I realized that we were both
claiming to be Israel. One cannot claim to be Israel without Moses and Mt.
Sinai, but one cannot be a Jew without Talmud. I believe that my friends, the Tsaddik and the Rabbi, are doubtless
Israel. They don’t believe that I am Israel, because I am not a Jew. In this, I
think, they make a fundamental mistake. They claim, as I believe does Talmud,
that the word “Jew” and the word Israel are interchangeable. I don’t think this
claim can be made on the basis of Hebrew Scriptures. It is interesting that the
word “Jew” or “Jews” (Yehud, Yehudim) really doesn’t appear in the
Hebrew Scriptures very frequently. I think it is less than 100 times. The word
Israel appears more than 2,000 times, 2575 times if the New Testament is
included in the count. The word only refers to what we might think of as a Jew
beginning with the second temple period, principally in the book of Esther,
probably written in 350 BC about events that occurred in 470 BC, that is after
the return of the exiles to Jerusalem. I maintain that Rabbinic Phariseeism,
which is what we now call Judaism, really took hold of the religion of Israel
in Babylon, the cultural center of the remnant of Israel after the devastation
of the Holy land in 132 AD. Remember,
it’s the Babylonian Talmud that carries the most weight in Jewish life, not the
Jerusalem Talmud. The Pharisee movement created an innovation in the religion
of Israel that allowed one to practice a form of the religion of Israel when
one could not go to the temple. This was an innovation.
I have
a unique spin on the passage of Christian scripture in which Jesus talks about
new wine skins and new patches on old garments.
“No one tears a piece of cloth from a new garment and puts it on an old garment; otherwise he will both tear the new, and the piece from the new will not match the old. No one puts new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the new wine will burst the skins and it will be spilled out, and the skins will be ruined, but new wine must be put into fresh wineskins, and no one puts new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the new wine will burst the skins and it will be spilled out, and the skins will be ruined. New wine must be put into fresh wineskins. No one, after drinking old wine wishes for new; for he says, 'The old wine is mellow.” (Chrestos in Greek means “mellow” in this context)” Luke 5:38People assuming that Jesus’ innovations are the new wine, struggle with this final statement that “…old wine is mellow, better, good et alia.” Why would Jesus say that His innovations are not as good as the customs of the Pharisees and the disciples of John the Baptist?
I
maintain that He is saying the opposite. He is saying that Rabbinic Phariseeism
is the innovation. As I mentioned, Rabbinic Phariseeism is a way to practice
the religion of Israel without a temple. Jesus was saying that as Messiah he
would fulfill the messianic expectation by rebuilding the temple at the same
time transforming it into a temple made of living stones. “You also, as living stones,
are being built up as a spiritual house for a holy priesthood, to offer up
spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus the Messiah.” (1Peter 2:4)
He
would fulfill the Messianic expectation of the rebuilding and purifying the
temple that had been profaned by the Syrian Greeks, the Hasmoneans who
extended its space for military purposes and then by Herod the Great, who
used it to aggrandize himself. He would, however, do so in a way unexpected. He
would create a living temple, the church.
He thus claimed to be the fulfillment of the tradition of Israel. It was
the Pharisees who were the innovation.
My
dear friend Rabbi Lefkowitz, an ultra-orthodox Rabbi, would howl at this
interpretation, as would most Christians, but it was he who started my thinking
about this, I’m sure to his chagrin. He once said, “You Christians have got it
wrong. You are more Jewish than we are. You have temples and sacrifices. We
believe that the temple and the sacrifices of the law were concessions to the
Jews, lest they backslide into the practices of the Canaanites. The sacrificial
order is not central to Judaism. It’s the moral and ethical content of the
Torah that matters.” To which I want to
respond that the pages of the Hebrew Scriptures fairly drip with sacrificial
blood?
A
second insight that pushed me in this direction came from Hershel Shanks, editor
of the Biblical Archaeology Review,
with whom Rabbi Lefkowitz thoroughly disagrees on this point. Shanks holds that
two forms of Judaism survived the destruction of the temple, Christianity and
Rabbinic Phariseeism. The Sadducees, the Zealots, the Essenes and the followers
of John lost their reason for being with the destruction of the temple.
Rabbinic Phariseeism, or what we now call Judaism, is a religion of the
synagogue. It survives because the temple is optional, though desirable.
Christianity
is still the religion of the temple, though a spiritualized temple. Catholicism
and eastern Orthodoxy still offer sacrifice. Protestantism is thus a deviant
form of Christianity, a form of Phariseeism which holds that there is no more
sacrifice and no need for further sacrifice. We, in the traditional forms of
Christianity, maintain, as I believe Jesus did, that we are fulfilling, not
changing Torah. The only way I would disagree with Hershel Shanks is instead of
using the word Judaism to stand for the totality of Israel, I would say that
two forms of the religion of Israel survived the destruction of the temple,
Christianity and Judaism.
The
best estimates for the Jewish population of the ancient Mediterranean world are
about one or two million. The estimate of the Jews living in the Diaspora, (scattered
communities) in the Roman world is perhaps 4 or 5 million more.
Dr. Rodney Stark in his
book The
Rise of Christianity, points out that in a few centuries the Jewish
population of the Roman Empire was greatly reduced to perhaps fewer than one
million. Certainly many were killed in war or died in plague, but it is
doubtful, that the majority of first century “Israel” would have perished. More
likely they found in Christianity a kind of “reform” Judaism which allowed them
to practice the religion of Israel,
praying to the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob and reading the books of Moses,
and the prophets, without the restrictions that made life so difficult in a
diaspora, (a scattering) through the Greco Roman world, where circumcision was
mocked as an obscenity and kosher meat was hard to find.
The
end of all this, is that there are two major representatives of the religion of
Israel, two groups of people who reverence the books of Moses and the rest of
the Tanakh, that is Hebrew
scriptures, three if you count the 800 Samaritans who are still alive. The two
are Christianity and Judaism, or more properly, Rabbinic Phariseeism. To say
that Christianity comes from Jewish roots is very problematic. It means that
Christianity must necessarily supersede Judaism; or that somehow Christianity
is inferior to its parent religion, Judaism, a sort of “Judaism light.”
I
believe it is more accurate to say that both Judaism, though it precedes
Christianity by about 3 or 4 centuries, and Christianity are variations of the
religion of Israel. We Christians thus must concede that Jews have an authentic
claim to be Israel. What I would hope for is the recognition of Jews that we
too practice a form of the religion of Israel, which we believe to be its
fulfillment. Thus we may find a new mutual respect and a way to collaborate
despite the horrors of the past, a collaboration that is respectful and
mutually beneficial, while admitting real and serious differences.
We
claim to be Israel by just a bit of genetic inheritance and a lot of adoption.
We are members of the same religion, but followers of different faiths. Jesus
and Moses are not enemies. Their followers should imitate them.
Rev.
Know-it-all
PS you
will be pleased to know that my family did not get along with Henry Ford. They
refused to loan him money when he wanted to get his business going. We thought
he was a bad investment and beside he gave us the shpilkes.