Posted on 05/26/2014 12:44:16 PM PDT by NYer
Pope Francis has taken “certainly the most friendly, proactive, accommodating position of any Pope probably in history” toward the Jewish people, Rabbi Ken Spiro explained to CNA May 26.
The fact that the Roman Pontiff has “gone somewhere such as Herzl’s tomb is kind of like closing a circle” he stated.
Rabbi Spiro, who was originally born and raised in the United States but has been living and working in Israel for the past 32 years, is a historian who specializes in Jewish-Christian relations.
Referring to the Pope’s visit earlier today to the tomb of Theodore Herzl, who was a Jewish journalist and writer credited as the father of modern political Zionism, the rabbi explained that Pope Francis’ act of laying a wreath on the tomb is an important symbol in bridging Catholic-Jewish relations.
Calling to mind how Pope Pius VI made the first effort to reconcile divisions between the two faith traditions and how these were solidified by their successors in releasing Jews of former claims the Church had made against them, principally that they were guilty of Jesus’s death, the rabbi noted that “what Pope Francis has done now is the next step.”
“He’s actually come out and said that God never rejected his relationship with the Jewish people and through the Jewish people we basically learn about God, which is a very proactive theological statement.”
Observing how the pontiff has also met with many leaders of other faiths during his pilgrimage to the Holy Land, Rabbi Spiro noted that historically the trip is part of a long process of attempting to stifle drawn out conflicts, which he described as being primarily of a religious nature.
Breaking down the complex history of interreligious relations within the State of Israel, Rabbi Spiro explained that “They call it the Holy Land,” and that the term holy is “originally connected to Judaism.”
“From Abraham onward beginning with the temple on Mt Jerusalem this has been the holiest spot in the world for Jewish people,” and is “the direction toward which all Jews in the world pray,” he noted.
Since Christianity and Islam “are historically offshoots from Judaism” there are also strong but different connections for both within the Holy Land the rabbi continued, stating that “the Christian connection is probably more direct” because “Jesus was Jewish and he lived in Jerusalem, he preached in Jerusalem, he visited the Temple Mount and the Christian Bible contains the Jewish Bible.”
However in the seventh century “a story of Muhammad’s midnight ride was connected” to the same zone, so ever since then “the temple of Mt Jerusalem where the gold dome stands is the third holiest site” for Muslims.
“So it’s holy to the three great monotheistic faiths” he observed, explaining that despite the fact that “there is complete freedom of worship and access to holy sites” in Israel, the situation is “extremely complicated because it has to be balanced again by security issues” such as ongoing terror attacks.
The difficulty for Christians, he explained, is that “they’re kind of tugged between the Jewish-Arab-Palestinian-Islamic conflict” since most living in the Holy Land are “are racially-ethnically Arab, and therefore they’re kind of caught between a rock and a hard place.”
“If you know anything about the Middle East in general the most endangered Christian communities are” there he noted, adding that although Christians are “stuck in the middle,” the tension is “primarily between Jewish national association with Israel and Islamic tradition which is newer and not as central religiously.”
“Like everything in the Middle East it’s extremely complicated. It’s partially a religious conflict, it’s partially a political conflict,” but “the underlying roots in my opinion are really religious roots.”
This, Rabbi Spiro went on, is because the Islamic world view believes “that Islam is the final religion and the world should recognize that,” and because of this they do not “recognize sovereignty of people over land that was formerly owned by Muslims.”
“It’s something not allowed in their theology. That which was Islamic must remain Islamic” he stated, recalling how Israel was previously controlled by Muslim dynasties for more than 1300 years.
“This territory was controlled by different Islamic dynasties and in 1948 when Israel was declared a state” the Arab nations did not accept the partition vote, so they “declared war on the State of Israel and we’ve been in this constant state of conflict ever since” Rabbi Spiro observed.
So the Pope’s “intentions are fantastic” he said, explaining that although he is skeptical “of people’s goodwill overcoming the bad blood and the history in there…it’s a nice move on his part.”
Like everything in the Middle East its extremely complicated. Its partially a religious conflict, its partially a political conflict, but the underlying roots in my opinion are really religious roots.
To underscore Rabbi Spiro's statement, consider the situation with Cardinal Rai. Pope Francis invited Rai, Patriarch of the Maronite Church, to accompany him on his pilgrimate to the Holy Land. Rai's critics have said the pilgrimage implies normalization with Israel at a time when the two countries remain formally at war. Israel has invaded Lebanon several times, occupying part of the neighboring country's territory for 18 years until it withdrew in 2000. In 2006, a 34-day war between Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah group left 1,200 Lebanese and 160 Israelis dead. Cardinal Rai's visit is purely religious. The cardinal began his visit in the West Bank and east Jerusalem. He then crossed into Israel to visit a Maronite parish in Jaffa. Later this week, he plans to celebrate Mass for Lebanese Christians who fought alongside Israeli troops during Israel's occupation of south Lebanon. These fighters fled to Israel when its army withdrew and are seen as traitors. Not surprisingly, the Lebanese media have negatively portrayed the Patriarch's trip.
This rabbi is a dolt. Anyone, including the pope, who can stand next to Abbas and praise palestinians is delusional at best
**So the Popes intentions are fantastic he said, explaining that although he is skeptical of peoples goodwill overcoming the bad blood and the history in there its a nice move on his part.**
We must all be aware that Judaism is the root of Christianity.
I’m glad the story specified it was a JEWISH rabbi. Those Muslim rabbis can be corkers!
Excellent “Crash Course on Jewish History” by Ken Spiro at:
http://www.simpletoremember.com/authors/a/crash-course-jewish-history-mp3s/
Rumor has it he’s contacted a mohel.
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