Jewish-Christian
Difficulties in Challenging Christian Zionism
by Rev.
Robert O. Smith*, February 6, 2007
In our
post-Holocaust era, many Jews have identified with the State
of Israel as their last line of defense should the community
again come under the threat of eradication. Most Christians,
especially in North America, are unable to begin fathoming
this possibility. Their communities simply have not been
under such a threat. The typical American lack of historical
literacy makes it difficult for many of us to comprehend the
Jewish community's active memory of the Holocaust—even among
Jews who did not have family members directly affected by
those horrible events. Given the active nature of Holocaust
memory and what for many Jews is therefore a deeply
existential attachment to the State of Israel (even if they
have no intention of becoming Israeli citizens), mainline
Christians working to responsibly critique Israeli policies
affecting Palestinians are often surprised at Jewish
suspicion or immediate rejection of their efforts.
During the
past several years, many mainline denominations, including
the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), have
sought to engage questions of justice related to Israel and
Palestine. These efforts have often been accompanied by
long, sometimes painful conversations with Jewish dialogue
partners.
Even more
recently, many of us engaged with Middle East concerns have
begun the process of critiquing Christian Zionism, a
movement within American evangelicalism and fundamentalism
dedicated to promoting political support for the State of
Israel. Critiquing Christian Zionism is to address a
phenomenon related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
rather than the conflict itself. Nevertheless, this activity
may raise suspicions among some Jews about the possibility
of anti-Jewish or anti-Israeli bias. From some Jewish
viewpoints, mainline critiques of evangelical political
positions favorable to the State of Israel are practically
indistinguishable from direct criticisms of the Jewish state
(as expressed, for instance, in efforts toward divestment
from companies profiting from Israeli policies in the
Occupied Palestinian Territories). Because of the active
memory of the Holocaust, many Jews perceive direct
criticisms of the State of Israel as attacks on the
possibility of Jewish existence, no matter the spirit of the
critique.
***
Jews are
understandably nervous when Christians begin the process of
theologizing their empowerment or their existence; Christian
complicity in the Holocaust has taught Jews that Christians
are capable, in fact, of theologizing them into
disempowerment or even nonexistence. A first step in
responsibly engaging theological critiques related to
Israel/Palestine, therefore, is to approach the questions in
humility rather than arrogance.
For ELCA
Lutherans, a good place to start is the "Declaration of the
ELCA to the Jewish Community,"1
adopted in April 1994. Noting especially the
"anti-Judaic diatribes" found in Martin Luther's later
writings, the Declaration confessed "the complicity of our
own tradition within this history of hatred" and expressed
"urgent desire to live out our faith in Jesus Christ with
love and respect for the Jewish people."
The
humility modeled in this statement can carry over into
Christian thinking about the proper Jewish and Palestinian
relationship in the land of historic Palestine. When
Christians begin traveling down lines of thought which argue
that Jews should again be removed from the land because they
have failed to properly observe the Torah's demands of
justice, Jews understandably can become quite nervous and
irritated.
2
Refusing to theologize the existence of either Jews or
Palestinians is one way to demonstrate humility. We must
engage these conversations not as 'righteous innocents' but
as 'empowered perpetrators,' knowing that our personal and
communal legacies witness against us. Our complicity in the
suffering now engulfing both Israelis and Palestinians goes
beyond the implications of government policy. Though
repudiating both, we inherit a tradition of theological
anti-Judaism and a legacy of murderous anti-Semitism, two
factors that led to the founding of Israel as a modern
nation-state and the subsequent displacement of
Palestinians. In more ways than we like to admit, the
situation in Israel/Palestine is a product of our own doing.
3
***
Recognizing
that the conditions of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict are
largely of our own making gives us the opportunity to take
constructive, self-critical steps to address it rather than
only pointing the accusing finger at either Israelis or
Palestinians or their diaspora communities. This is the
spirit in which we make our critique of Christian Zionism.
It is a product of the North American context, an outgrowth
of mid- to late-nineteenth century theological and political
developments.
But the
issue of Christian Zionism itself takes us back into
important conversations concerning proper Jewish-Christian
relations, questions related to but not entirely dependent
on our views on the State of Israel and its policies toward
Palestinians.
Perhaps the most important of these questions involves "supersessionism,"
or "replacement theology," the idea that the Christian
relationship with God has replaced or superseded the Jewish
relationship with God. In our post-Holocaust era alarms
sound when Christians speak of Jews being "replaced as the
people of God." As it is put by Franklin Littell, a pioneer
of post-Holocaust Jewish-Christian relations, "To teach that
a people's mission in God's providence is finished, that
they have been relegated to the limbo of history, has
murderous implications which murderers in time will spell
out."
4
Christian
Zionists, drawing from the system of biblical interpretation
known as premillennial dispensationalism, assert that the
covenants made by God with Jews, as a people, are not only
eternal, but that they are entirely separate from the
covenant between God and Gentile believers. This arrangement
is sometimes referred to as "dual covenant" theology. Any
other understanding of the relationship, Christian Zionists
argue, is a variation of supersessionism. Moreover, their
theological system allows them to publicly disavow any
effort to convert Jews; this feature alleviates many Jews'
anxieties about conversion as yet another means for
diminishing the strength of the Jewish community.
The
Christian Zionist interpretation of the biblical
relationship between Judaism and Christianity is as
innovative as their doctrine of the secret rapture of
born-again Christians before the world descends to
Armageddon.. The most sustained biblical conversation on
this topic comes from Paul in Romans 9–11. The language Paul
uses there is far more complex than a simple division
between "dual covenant" and "supersessionist" options.
Indeed, his argument is almost paradoxical. In Romans 11,
Paul speaks directly to Gentile Christians: "But if some of
the branches were broken off, and you, a wild olive shoot,
were grafted in their place to share the rich root of the
olive tree, do not boast over the branches. If you do boast,
remember that it is not you that support the root, but the
root that supports you" (vv. 17–18). The "root" here is the
preexisting covenant with Jews into which the Gentile
believers have been grafted by faith. Still speaking to
Gentiles, Paul, joyfully identifying himself as a Jew,
affirms both the Jewish covenant and the eternal promises of
God: "as regards election they are beloved, for the sake of
their ancestors; for the gifts and the calling of God are
irrevocable." (11:28–29)
In this
section of Romans, it is difficult to defend either a strict
supersessionist or strict dual covenant understanding of the
relationship of Judaism to Christianity. As is often the
case, the complexity of the biblical witness on these
matters is far more trustworthy than the simplicity of our
categories.
We must not
allow our theological reasoning to be dictated by political
expediency or even by our deep friendships. Our theologies
of interfaith relations have a great deal to say about our
fundamental commitments, that is, about our fundamental
interpretation of the Gospel. To change such fundamental
theological categories simply to smooth over rough spots in
relationships is a theological method of doubtful integrity.
Nevertheless, we must be cognizant of our post-Shoah
context, understanding that some Christian theologies
concerning the status of Judaism have been used against
Jews. These examples of Christian triumphalism must be
repudiated as unbiblical.
***
Christians should be aware that there is a spirited
conversation among Jews around the world about their proper
approach to Christian Zionism. On one hand, the
unconditional support of the State of Israel is most
welcome, especially with the perceived rise of anti-Semitism
in Europe and the increased willingness of mainline
Christians to criticize Israel.
5 On the other hand, as ADL director Abraham
Foxman has cautioned, while still accepting any expression
of support for the State of Israel, Christian Zionists
support domestic policies at variance with many Jewish
political tendencies.
6 Moreover, Christian Zionists come from
evangelical and fundamentalist Christian communities
themselves long associated by Jews with anti-Semitic
tendencies.
7
This
contemporary debate in the Jewish community echoes a similar
debate in the immediate post-Holocaust era, when some
Christian and Jewish leaders were attempting to construct
what we now know as the "Judeo-Christian tradition." At the
time, linking Jews and Christians together in political
awareness was a very new idea. While some Jews, for instance
Sholem Asch, in his 1945 pamphlet, One Destiny: An
Epistle to the Christians, urged the acceptance of this
new arrangement,
8 many Jews argued strongly against others in
their own community who decided to join with Christian
political power so soon after that power had crushed their
people in the Nazi concentration camps and crematoria. As
late as 1963, Arthur A. Cohen (who would later write The
Tremendum) argued in The Myth of the Judeo-Christian
Tradition that the "tradition" simply didn't exist.
9
The debate
within the Jewish community about Christian Zionism comes at
a time when Jewish critiques or rejections of Zionism are
themselves under increasing attack. The pamphlet produced by
the American Jewish Committee, Progressive Jewish Thought
and the New Anti-Semitism, is a recent example of
attempts to suppress Jewish dissent.
There is an
important lesson here for Christians seeking to be
responsible in their criticisms of the State of Israel. Many
of us assume that because the Jewish state is thoroughly
established, its protection ensured through its partnership
with the United States, concerns about its "existence" are
over-stated. The intensity of Jewish concern over strategic
partnerships with Christians and the intensity of rebukes
against Jewish dissenters should provide a clue to
Christians that many Jews see these topics as matters of
grave existential concern. Christians should be aware of
these tensions, both for comprehending the complexity of
thought within the Jewish community and for respecting its
continued suspicions concerning Christian power.
This is a complex
conversation. To simplify, however, some Jews are
encouraging their communities to migrate their energies in
Jewish-Christian relations away from mainline Christians and
toward evangelical and fundamentalist groups. These
arguments have been present since the resurgence of
Christian Zionism in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
Christians must understand that these struggles are not
merely political; for Jews, they are conversations with
bearing on very real concerns for communal survival.
Recommended reading:
Both David Brog and Zev Chafets are Jews invested in
promoting the Jewish relationship with Christian Zionism.
Brog is the main lobbying in Washington, DC, for CUFI
(Christians United for Israel). David Brog, Standing With
Israel: Why Christians Support the Jewish State (Lake
Mary, Fl.: FrontLine, 2006); and Zev Chafets, A Match
Made in Heaven: American Jews, Christian Zionists, and
One Man's Exploration of the Weird and Wonderful
Judeo-Evangelical Alliance (New York: HarperCollins, 2007).
Especially interesting for comprehending the Jewish debate
on Christian Zionism are the facing columns from Chafets and
Anti-Defamation League national director Abraham Foxman in
the 16 January 2007 issue of Time Magazine.
Other recommended titles: Mark I. Pinsky,
A Jew among the Evangelicals: A Guide for the Perplexed
(Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 2006); and Amy-Jill
Levine, The Misunderstood Jew: The Church and the Scandal
of the Jewish Jesus (San Francisco: HarperSanFrancisco,
2006). Levine is especially concerned with the anti-Jewish
images she identifies in liberation theology. One example
particularly disturbing to her is the work of Naim Ateek, a
Palestinian Anglican priest.
*The Rev. Robert O. Smith is Lutheran Campus
Pastor at the University of Chicago. He is the Northern
Illinois coordinator for Churches for Middle East Peace.
With Charles P. Lutz, he is author of Christians and a
Land Called Holy: How We Can Foster Justice, Peace, and Hope
(Fortress, 2006).
1 "The
Declaration of the ELCA to the Jewish Community" (April 19,
1994), available online at http://www.elca.org/ecumenical/interreligious/jewish/declaration.html.
2 A
common rejoinder is that Christian appeals to Jews to be
"just" is, in fact, an appeal for Jews to be "weak," to
return to their historic place in relation to Christian
power.
3
Charles P. Lutz and Robert O. Smith, Christians And a
Land Called Holy: How We Can Foster Justice, Peace, And Hope
(Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2006).
4 Franklin Littell,
The Crucifixion of the Jews (New York: Harper & Row,
1975), 2.
5
David Brog, Standing With Israel: Why Christians Support
the Jewish State (Lake Mary, Fl.: FrontLine, 2006); and
Zev Chafets, A Match Made in Heaven: American Jews,
Christian Zionists, and One Man's Exploration of the Weird
and Wonderful Judeo-Evangelical Alliance (New York:
HarperCollins, 2007).
6 This
has been Foxman's line of reasoning since late 2005, when a
series of articles by The Forward exposed some tensions
between evangelicals and Jews in America. Most recently, he
expressed the view in a column head-to-head with Zev Chafets
in the 16 January 2007 issue of Time Magazine.
7 Some
Jews observe the overt philo-semitism of many evangelicals
as a hopeful sign, especially when these expressions are
tied with appreciation for the State of Israel. Others are
more ambivalent. See the insightful discussion by Yaakov
Ariel, Philosemites or Antisemites? Evangelical Christian
Attitudes toward Jews, Judaism, and the State of Israe,
Analysis of Current Trends in Antisemitism 20 (Jerusalem:
Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of
Antisemitism, 2002). Many Christian Zionists are keen to
defend not only their present expressions but their historic
development as devoid of any anti-Semitic tendencies. See,
for instance, David A. Rausch, "Paranoia About
Fundamentalists?" Judaism (1979): 304–8.
8
Sholem Asch, One Destiny: An Epistle to the Christians
(New York: Putnam, 1945). This interesting little book was
brought to my attention by Harold Vogelaar.
9 Arthur A. Cohen,
The Myth of the Judeo-Christian Tradition (New York:
Harper & Row, 1963).
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