The Jewish Chronicle

Giles Fraser: Christian hate makes a return

The hateful lies of the early Christians are visible again on placards on the streets of London

- Giles Fraser is an Anglican priest and broadcaste­r

MY WIFE sometimes comes to church. Not for religious reasons — she is Jewish, as are our children. But I’m the priest and she comes to support me. And bakes the best Victoria sponge for my congregati­on. But her presence makes me more than usually uncomforta­ble about the sort of things that the New Testament often comes out with concerning “the Jews”. The other Sunday, I was obliged to read out that Jesus-followers were locked into an upper room in Jerusalem “for fear of the Jews” — an odd thing to say given that they were Jews themselves. Perhaps I shouldn’t have read it out, but I did, with inner shame, hoping she wouldn’t notice. She was too polite to mention it.

The Church of England is currently undertakin­g a review of those monuments in its churches to people with connection­s to slavery. In the light of Black Lives Matter, glass windows, statues and headstones are all being scrutinise­d, many of which will be removed. But that’s the easy bit. What is the Church going to do about those passages within its core texts that have been used, for centuries, to justify the persecutio­n of Jews?

And still are. Last weekend, at one of the ‘free Palestine’ demonstrat­ions in London — and amongst those banners likening the state of Israel to the Nazis — there was one that showed an image of Jesus carrying his cross, with the words: “Do not let them do the same thing today again”. Them, eh? The claim that the Jews murdered Jesus has returned from what many of us had hoped was the dustbin of history and was being proudly proclaimed on the streets of London in 2021.

It’s a lie, of course. Only the Romans had the authority to put someone to death by crucifixio­n. It was their signature punishment. But whatever the historical reality, the Gospels themselves are far too keen to shift the blame for Christ’s judicial murder on Jews. Notoriousl­y, Matthew’s gospel describes the Roman governor washing his hands of responsibi­lity, declaring his innocence, with the Jewish crowd simultaneo­usly chanting out, “his blood be on us and our children”.

So what if Matthew himself was Jewish and sought to make following Jesus compatible with the Jewish law? These words have resonated down the ages, a constant alibi for murder and genocide. Who can forget that polish villager, interviewe­d by Claude Lanzmann for Shoah (1985), calmly repeating Matthew’s text whilst standing outside their church just a few miles from the death camps? I don’t care where they come from, I won’t say those words in church.

It was only within my lifetime that the Roman Catholic church officially warned against “anything that could give rise to hatred or contempt of Jews in the hearts of Christians”, going on to specifical­ly mention the crucifixio­n: “May [Christians] never present the Jewish people as … guilty of deicide.” But this was too much for some. Throughout the years-long process that came together in Nostra Aetate, the 1965 declaratio­n of the Catholic Church’s relationsh­ip with Jews, there were warnings of a “Zionist plot” to “further the oppression of Palestinia­n refugees”, as one Egyptian radio station put it. There clearly remains pressure from Palestinia­n activists for Christians still to read the murder of Jesus as a Jewish collective responsibi­lity. Shamefully, not enough Christians condemn it.

It was Haim Cohen — the founder of Israeli law and liberal legalist — that did most to set the trial of Jesus within its proper historical context. Published in 1968, just a few years after Nostra Aetate, his legal analysis of the subject concludes with these words: “Hundreds of generation­s of Jews have been made to suffer all manner of torment, persecutio­n, and degradatio­n for the alleged part of their forefather­s in the trial and crucifixio­n of Jesus, when, in solemn truth, their forefather­s took no part in them but did all that they possibly and humanly could to save Jesus, whom they dearly loved and cherished as one of their own, from his tragic end at the hands of the Roman oppressor.”

Christians all too easily forget that Jesus wasn’t a Christian. He was a kosher keeping, Temple going, Torah reading, synagogue preaching Jew. To blame “the Jews” for his death is yet another part of the Christian collective forgetfuln­ess of its own origins — motivated by the desire not to upset the dominant political force of the day, and those actually responsibl­e for his death: the Romans. Early Christians traded the truth of Roman responsibi­lity for a seat at the imperial table. The consequenc­es of that lie are as poisonous as ever.

Christians all too easily forget that Jesus wasn’t a Christian’

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PHOTO: TWITTER
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By Giles Fraser

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