Thursday, September 2, 2010

Chapter 1, From Paul to Augustine

100722 - Anti-Semitism 321-800

To understand how and why the Jews were chosen for elimination, What and why there was “Jewish Problem” to inspire secular Europe to conceive of the Holocaust it will be necessary to explore first the origins of Christian anti-Judaism in the most basic documents making up the theology of Christianity, the letters of Paul of Tarsus written several decades after the assumed crucifixion; and the canonical gospels which together constitute the Christian bible. But before looking at those documents we should first have some understanding as to why a messianic movement leading to Christianity arose from Judaism.

1. Jewish messianism and a resurrected god

The emergence of the Jesus movement cannot be understood without connection to events in Palestine before and during the first century. In 164 BCE the priest Judah the Maccabee led a popular uprising against their overlords in Seleucid Syria. A response to what was widely seen as the desecration of pagan rule over the land given the Jews by God, the Maccabean victory was followed by a 100 year long Hasmonean dynasty. In 63 BCE Rome dispatched Pompey to put down unrest in Palestine. The Romans, like their Syrian province, were by religion pagan, by culture Hellenic. The clock, and the unrest in Jewish Palestine, was turned back 100 years.

Herod replaced his father in court and, in 37 BCE was able to overthrow Hasmonean rule. With the support of Rome he declared himself king, had most of the surviving Hasmoneans put to death and, to ensure his legitimacy in the eyes of the populace, married Mariamne, the surviving Hasmonean princess. She bore him two sons who were also murdered to eliminate a future Hasmonean challenge.

In public a Jew, Herod was an Idumaean by birth, and not considered Jewish according to most religious authorities. This, along with was his dependence on Rome and his public admiration of Hellenism were all affronts to most Palestinian Jews and a cause for unrest. Herod was extravagant in building monuments to Hellenism, his most famous being what today is called the Second Temple, of which the Wailing Wall is its only survival. He also had built the pagan city of Caesarea Maritima, today’s Caesarea on the Israeli coast, as well as pagan temples in other Roman provinces dedicated to the emperor Augustus. The cost of these extravagant architectural triumphs was paid by taxes collected from the lower classes, already made destitute and hungry by over taxing by Rome.

As the iron fist of his rule loosened as he lay on his death bed in 4 BCE popular resentment surfaced again, the beginning of what would eventually grow into the Roman-Jewish war of 66-73. Bands of what the Jewish historian Josephus referred to as “bandits” rose up, targeting the symbols of pagan oppression, the upper class and the Roman legions themselves. While many of these bands existed only to provide food for their families, over the sixty years leading up to the war ideology increasingly became a primary motivator.

The land of Palestine, according to tradition, was given the Jews as part of their covenant with God. Paganism and Hellenism in Palestine are an affront to God, pollution of land considered holy. As it was for the Maccabees a century and a half earlier, ridding the land of the pagan pollution became, for an increasing number of rebels, a religious obligation. By normal standards taking on Rome was certain to end in disaster. After all, Roman legions controlled most of the known world. It was belief in divine intervention, that God would intervene to drive the pagans from His land that came to inspire the insurgents. God, they believed, would provide them with a leader and, with his assistance, would drive the pagans from the land and, with the defeat of Rome, would herald the long awaited Kingdom of Heaven. It was this longing for divine intervention that inspired messianic fervor.

Messianism: A messiah in Jewish tradition typically refers to a person inspired by God to lead the people, a king, by definition one anointed with holy oil. During the decades leading up to and following the disaster of the war against Rome many appeared considered themselves or their followers to be a messiah. In the year 4CE a former slave of Herod, Simon ben-Joseph was thought to be a messiah in his rebellion against the king. He was followed by Athronges who also led an unsuccessful rebellion, this time against the Romans. The most prominent hailed as messiah in the war with Rome was Simon bar Gior. In 66 this popular and successful Jewish rebel commanded an army that numbered in the tens of thousands and was successful in routing the Romans. In the end he was not able to save Jerusalem and, in 73, was captured and brought to Rome where he was executed, reportedly in the robes of a king.

The disaster of the fall of Jerusalem, the massive loss of Jewish lives, the many sold by Rome into slavery, did not dampen the belief that God would send a messiah to liberate the land. Sixty years later Simon bar Kochba led another rebellion against Rome. He succeeded in proclaiming Jewish sovereignty in a portion of Israel and was proclaimed messiah by Rabbi Akiva. That final flame of Jewish resistance ended on the cliffs of Masada in 132.

Crucifixion: Death by crucifixion was Rome’s execution of choice for rebels. Because death was excruciatingly slow those hanging on the cross provoked fear and revulsion, a hoped for deterrent. Over the six years of the war itself Josephus describes thousands of Jews crucified as rebels. The Romans caught and crucified as many as 500 Jews each day of the siege of Jerusalem, according to some estimates. More than one million Jews lost their lives over the course of the rebellion according to Josephus.

If during the war the rebels were motivated by the conviction that their desperate effort against the overwhelming might of Rome would “force” God to intervene, with defeat belief gave way to despair. Judaism was in crisis. Temple-oriented worship ended the destruction of Jerusalem and the leveling of the temple; rabbinic Judaism, a minority before the rebellion, stepped in to take its place. And into the despair over God’s failure to provide a messiah to lead the fight against the pagans, some Jews, particularly those living in the Diaspora, sought solace in something entirely alien to Jewish tradition and belief, but common among their pagan neighbors.

At the heart of pagan Mystery religions stands a god-man, Dionysus for the Greeks, Osiris in Egypt, who offers the promise of everlasting life to its initiates. Among these religions the god-man dies, ascends to heaven and returns to life. “Through sharing in the death of Osiris-Dionysus initiates symbolically “died” to their lower, earthly, nature. Through sharing in his resurrection they were spiritually reborn and experienced their eternal and divine essence.” (The Jesus Mysteries, Timothy Freke & Peter Gandy, , 1999; p. 24)

Paul and the Kingdom of God

Christianity emerged as a messianic sect within Judaism during the First Century, a period during which Judea was occupied by Rome. It was a time of almost continuous turmoil and rebellion against the pagan occupier. Thousands of Jews were crucified as rebels (called “bandits” in the gospels) by Rome and some among the rebel leadership believed that by opposing the overwhelming might of Rome, that their desperate effort to liberate God’s Holy Land from paganism would result in Him intervening, provide them a leader in victory, a messiah. With the defeat of Rome God would then inaugurate a thousand year peace among all nations, the Kingdom of God.

With the destruction of Jerusalem and the temple, with the dispersal of the Jews as slaves throughout the empire, some sought consolation in a non-traditional spiritual rather than material messiah, one who would deliver them not from their earthly enemies, but would provide consolation in the life beyond. Yeshuah (Jesus), roughly translated as “savior,” was a fairly popular name during this period of national stress and social upheaval.

The salvational messianic sect of Judaism had little success in attracting Jews within Israel. It fared better in the Diaspora, again not so much among active Jews but among those known as God-fearers, pagans attracted to Judaism, attending services and celebrating the holidays, but not willing to commit to all of the demands of full conversion, particularly circumcision among the men. Paul of Tarsus was the self-appointed emissary of the salvational sect to the gentiles. During his conversion activities Paul became the first theologian and father of what was to become Christianity in all its forms. Since most Jews, most importantly the Palestinian leadership of the sect, disagreed with Paul about his mission and his claims regarding Jesus as “Son of God,” over time he grew estranged from Jerusalem. His letters reflect his increasing identification with and protection of his gentile converts, his growing distance from the Jerusalem leadership who insisted that his God-fearing converts fully convert first to Judaism, become Jews. The two positions were irreconcilable, and the rift between the two communities grew increasingly, their competition for converts another irritant.

Paul’s letters to his communities of converts, guides to problems facing the new religious communities, were to become the cornerstone of what would eventually become the “new” testament. In several of his letters he attacks the Jews as blind to the messiah he believed God had sent them, at times referring to their rejection of Jesus as serving Satan. Whether his letters reflect a device to make his mission more acceptable to his pagan converts, or reflect real frustration and anger at “the Jews” for failing to accept his understanding of Jesus as Christ, barely two centuries later his letters would provide the theological foundation for Christian suprematism, that Christianity has replaced Judaism in God’s favor; that Christians are the “new” Israel, having replaced the Jews as God’s chosen people.

According to the new theology the Jewish scriptures are outdated and replaced, background to the New Testament. According to the emerging theology the only reason for the continuing existence of Jews was to suffer God’s punishment for their crimes, and to bear witness to the truth of Christ.

But Paul also was the first to place blame for the crucifixion on the Jews, “who killed both the Lord Jesus and the prophets (that is, those whom God previously sent to lead them along the right path),” I Thessalonians 2:14-15, a charge repeated in the gospels.

Had Paul’s description of the Jews as “blind,” even charging them with unwittingly doing the work of Satan, had that been the limit of condemnation then Christianity and Judaism might have had a continuing disagreement over which religion was truly chosen of God, but the argument would unlikely have inspired and laid the foundation for Shoah. The rationale for a lethal solution for Christianity’s Jewish problem required an “objective” reason. This was provided by the gospel charge of deicide, that the Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus. In Matthew, for example, “the Jews” are portrayed as not only demanding his conviction and crucifixion, but accepting blame for the crucifixion not only for themselves, but for all generations to follow: Matthew 27.25-66, “Then the people as a whole answered, ‘His blood be on us and on our children!’ So he (Pilate) released Barabbas for them; and after flogging Jesus, he handed him over to be crucified.” A people portrayed as not merely rejecting, but choosing to murder God are not merely unwitting agents of Satan, but themselves diabolical and worthy of eternal punishment, of death. And to participate in their punishment, even in their murder, can be understood to be serving as God’s agent in their just punishment.

A second condition leading to a lethal solution to the Jewish problem, while not necessary as motivator, provided emotional energy to murder. That condition will be described a later chapter devoted to Christian doubt.

The Gospels

Along with the Paul’s letters the gospels constitute what the Council of Nicea in the mid-fourth century designated the official documents of Christian scripture. Although only four were chosen, the gospel was a popular literary form of the time and many more were written in the first centuries of the new religion. According to Catholic scholar Paula Fredriksen the gospel was written to “function as community-building documents. They offer religious proclamation, not simple history.1” Three of the four gospels, those attributed to Mark, Luke and Matthew, were written between the years 70 and 100, following the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the temple. The fourth, John, was written several decades after the third of these. While there is disagreement among some scholars regarding the materials appearing below, we can only judge the materials by their impact on Jewish history, whatever the true intentions of the authors might or not have been.

Mark is generally considered the earliest of the four, written sometime after the destruction of Jerusalem in 73. It also has the fewest references to the Jews in a manner likely to incite historical Jew-hatred. If the purpose of the Jewish revolt is recalled, it was to rid the land of the pagans, and their upper-class supporters, the Herodians. So the reference to the Pharisees plotting with the Herodians is at least historically incorrect.

3:6 And the Pharisees went out, and straightway with the Herodians took counsel against him, how they might destroy him.

The most dangerous charge against the Jews appearing in the gospels, and most likely to incite to violence involved assumed Jewish responsibility for the trial and execution of Jesus. As compared to the description of those events in Matthew, Luke sounds almost matter of fact:

14:1 Now after two days was the feast of the Passover and the unleavened bread: and the chief priests and the scribes sought how they might take him with subtlety, and kill him:

15:1 And straightway in the morning the chief priests with the elders and scribes, and the whole council, held a consultation, and bound Jesus, and carried him away, and delivered him up to Pilate.

The Matthew Gospel: Of the three synoptic gospels, those that were written between the years 70 and 100, that of Matthew is likely the most directly responsible for the centuries of anti-Jewish persecution that followed. In this gospel the Jews are not just responsible for the death of Jesus, but has the mob shout accept responsibility for the death also for generations in the future. As regards Pilate, a man described in historical documents of the time as cruel and disposed to excessive punishment towards Jews, his description in the gospel as defender of Jesus forced to accede to the Jewish mob, to the point of adopting the uniquely Jewish washing of the hands to make his point, this too serves to shift responsibility from Rome to “the Jews.”

Matthew, 27:19 – 27:26 And while he [Pilate] was sitting on the judgment-seat, his wife sent unto him, saying, Have thou nothing to do with that righteous man; for I have suffered many things this day in a dream because of him. Now the chief priests and the elders persuaded the multitudes that they should ask for Barabbas, and destroy Jesus. But the governor answered and said unto them, Which of the two will ye that I release unto you? And they said, Barabbas. Pilate saith unto them, What then shall I do unto Jesus who is called Christ? They all say, Let him be crucified. And he said, Why, what evil hath he done? But they cried out exceedingly, saying, Let him be crucified. So when Pilate saw that he prevailed nothing, but rather that a tumult was arising, he took water, and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this righteous man; see ye to it. And all the people answered and said, His blood be on us, and on our children. Then released he unto them Barabbas; but Jesus he scourged and delivered to be crucified.

Luke again temporizes as compared to Matthew, more closely resembles Mark’s depiction of the event. In fact synoptic refers to seeing, the close relationship between the three earlier gospels.

Luke, 20:19 – 20:20 And the scribes and the chief priests sought to lay hands on him in that very hour; and they feared the people: for they perceived that he spake this parable against them. And they watched him, and sent forth spies, who feigned themselves to be righteous, that they might take hold of his speech, so as to deliver him up to the rule and to the authority of the governor.

In John, the fourth of the gospels considered the word of God, we arrive at an attitude clearly more angry and competitive. In John the Jews are demonic, antichrists, intent on murdering Christianity as they did the messiah. For John the Jews, “are of your father, the devil." Later theologians, such as John Chrystostom, took up the theme and also described the Jews as of the devil, “the Synagogue is a brothel.”

John 8: 37-47 I know that ye are Abraham's seed: yet ye seek to kill me, because my word hath not free course in you. I speak the things which I have seen with my Father: and ye also do the things which ye heard from your father. They answered and said unto him, Our father is Abraham. Jesus saith unto them, If ye were Abraham's children, ye would do the works of Abraham. But now ye seek to kill me, a man that hath told you the truth, which I heard from God: this did not Abraham. Ye do the works of your father. They said unto him, We were not born of fornication; we have one Father, even God. Jesus said unto them, If God were your Father, ye would love me: for I came forth and am come from God; for neither have I come of myself, but he sent me. Why do ye not understand my speech? Even because ye cannot hear my word. Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father it is your will to do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and standeth not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he speaketh a lie, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father thereof.

John 19:12 Upon this Pilate sought to release him: but the Jews cried out, saying, If thou release this man, thou art not Caesar's friend: every one that maketh himself a king speaketh against Caesar.

John 20:19 When therefore it was evening, on that day, the first day of the week, and when the doors were shut where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in the midst, and saith unto them, Peace be unto you.

The Church Fathers

The next step in the evolution of the theological justification for anti-Judaism is represented in the fourth-century tradition known as adversus Judeaeos. Two famous and influential representatives of the tradition are Bishop John Chrysostum, and the author of City of God, St. Augustine.

Judaism continued an attractive competitor among early Christians as the following quote by Saint John Chrysostom, (c. 344-407) demonstrates, "But before I draw up my battle line against the Jews, I will be glad to talk to those who are members of our own body, those who seem to belong to our ranks although they observe the Jewish rites and make every effort to defend them. He then went on to attack the older religion and the Jewish people. In Orations Against The Jews he wrote, "The Jews are the odious assassins of Christ and for killing God there is no expiation possible, no indulgence or pardon. Christians may never cease vengeance..." and later, “the Synagogue is a brothel, a den of scoundrels." While not originating with Chrysostom (the charge of deicide, hinted at in Paul (see above) and appears openly in the gospels, Chrysostom's language is both more eloquent and more violent. Propagandists and Nazi sympathizers quoted Chrysostom as historical justification in the persecution of the Jews.

St. Augustine of Hippo (354–430) was a relative “moderate” in the struggle to define and insulate Christianity from the parent religion. While Christianity was the true inheritor of Judaism, the “new Israel,” he argued that the Jews should be preserved as witnesses to the true faith. Augustine argued that God allowed the Jews to survive, debased and in dispersion, as a warning to Christians: they “bear the guilt for the death of the Savior, for through their fathers they have killed Christ.” (St. Augustine) 20. “The Jews who slew Him, and would not believe in Him,” were punished by God, their temple destroyed, Jerusalem leveled. “By their own Scriptures [Jewish survival is] a testimony to us that we have not forged the prophecies about Christ.” According to Augustine, Judaism and the Jews have no purpose in continuing to exist except as a negative adjunct to the true faith. But his use of the word “forged” is interesting. It throws a bright light on what was and remains a serious problem, validating its existence absent credible evidence for the existence of Jesus the Man (see chapter two).

For Augustine, as for Paul three hundred years earlier, Christianity stands only on the insecure foundation of faith absent materiality. As Paul sought to reassure the Galatians, so Augustine faced the same problem. The only evidence for Jesus ever having a physical existence rests on prophesy adduced by the faithful from the Jewish bible. Nobody, including Paul writing only thirty years after the presumed crucifixion, could provide first-hand experience of the person who was sent to save the Jews, Jesus the Messiah. 1600 years later, even with the documentary discoveries at Qumran across the Dead Sea and Nag Hamadi, with a single questionable reference to the person in Josephus nowhere is reference to the man to be found. And this, I suggest, was and remains a source of doubt and insecurity for Christianity, the heart of the two-hundred year long search for the Historical Jesus; a major source for Christian anti-Judaism, and inspiration for secular antisemitism, inspiration for two-thousand years of persecution, expulsion and murder leading up to the twentieth century effort to, once and for all time, solve Christendom’s Jewish Problem, the Holocaust.

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