Achievements
    and Further Challenges in the Jewish-Christian Dialogue
Address delivered at the inauguration of the SIDIC Library Collection and Documentation Centre at the Pontifical Gregorian University. Courtesy of
I.
  
This
  address on the occasion of the inauguration of the SIDIC
  Library Collection and the SIDIC-Rome
  Documentation Centre at the Pontifical
  Gregorian University cannot begin but with a warm word of thanks. Thanks
  to the Sisters of Sion and their work, or better for the implementation of
  their mission. The SIDIC Library
  Collection and the SIDIC
  Documentation Centre, which is today officially and publicly transferred
  to the Cardinal Bea Centre of the Pontifical
  Gregorian University, is  with its more than 6,000 volumes on the
  Biblical, talmudic, midrash sources of Judaism, on anti-Semitism, the
  JewishChristian dialogue, the Jewish Liturgy and Jewish history  an
  impressing and outstanding sign of the work which was done in the last
  decades, a signpost of a new momentum and new fruits for the Jewish-Christian
  dialogue: the healing of deep wounds from the past, 
  the overcoming of misunderstandings and the promotion of reconciliation
  and peaceful collaboration between the two religions. 
But
  the Library and the Documentation
  Centre  despite their importance  are only the outward dimension of
  a mission which goes much deeper and is much larger. It has been the mission
  of the Congregation of our Lady of Sion
  since its foundation in 1843 to witness through word and life to Gods
  faithful love for the Jewish people and to work towards the fulfilment of the
  promises concerning the Jews and the Gentiles, the promises of justice and of
  peace which were proclaimed by the prophets for all humankind. 
The
  name Lady of Sion was chosen by her
  founder because Mary according to the Biblical tradition is the daughter of
  Sion par excellence, she was 
  although Christians have been known to forget  a Jewish woman, as Jesus was
  a Jew, and Sion is the Biblical name for Jerusalem, City of Peace. These
  origins evoke in these months much sorrow and sadness for all but the peaceful
  events we now witness  but nevertheless the unbroken promises which this
  name contains also evoke the hope so urgently needed in this difficult
  situation.  The Sisters of our Lady
  of Sion were and are a sign of hope founded in the  by the faithfulness
  of God  unbroken covenant and its promises of peace. 
I
  call to mind the foundation of the Congregation
  of our Lady of Sion in mid19th century because in these days we
  commemorate the 40th anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council
  in October 1962 and the promulgation of the Conciliar Declaration Nostra
  aetate on the 28th of October 1965, which was a historical breakthrough in
  Jewish-Christian relations and at the same time a hopeful new beginning. In
  remembering both the foundation of the Congregation
  of our Lady of Sion and the promulgation of Nostra
  aetate makes one reflect that the Conciliar breakthrough had forerunners
  and was not possible without the courageous work of this Congregation. But
  also the implementation of what the Council in a solemn Declaration stated
  needed dedicated women and men who worked hard for its reception, realisation
  and continuation. Among them the Sisters of the Congregation
  of our Lady of Sion were the first.
 II.
In
  this context I could and should  remember
  many other outstanding personalities who paved the way to the Councils
  Declaration Nostra aetate and to
  our present Jewish-Christian dialogue. I limit myself to one, who is also
  important for this solemn inauguration, namely Cardinal Augustin Bea. 
Pope
  John XXIII was elected to be a Pope of transition, an interim Pope so to say,
  but who was himself to be the architect of transition in the Church. One of
  the most fundamental shifts he made was the beginning of a new era in
  relations between Christians and Jews. Already as Nuncio in Istanbul during
  the Second World War he personally intervened to save Jewish lives. His own
  background therefore lent solid credibility on which to usher in a new age of
  relations. So he could tell Jews he met soon after his election: I am
  Joseph your brother. This was a new and unaccustomed tone after so many
  centuries where the relations between Jews and Christians were anything but
  brotherly and friendly.  
But
  to implement such a new start can be a challenge for a Pope too. Popes have
  according to Catholic doctrine the fullness of jurisdiction within the
  Catholic Church; but it would be more then naive to think that a Pope himself
  is not conditioned by many others around him. Pope John XXIII was fortunate to
  find an able collaborator in a fine, highly regarded German Old Testament
  scholar and at the same time a man who knew the Curia and who knew to deal
  with it, a man gifted with wisdom, prudence and courage, human sensitivity and
  a wakeful spiritual mind, Cardinal Augustin Bea. The Pope appointed him the
  first President of the then Pontifical
  Secretariat for Promoting Christian Unity (1960) and after a memorable
  visit of Jules Isaak in June 1960 charged him to prepare a document on Jews
  for the Council he had announced shortly earlier. 
  
The
  way ahead was to become a thorny one. After the document had made its passage
  through the Council, Cardinal Bea told a friend: If 
  I had known all the difficulties before, I do not know whether I would
  have had the courage to take this way. There was vehement opposition both
  from outside and from within. From inside the old wellknown patterns of
  traditional anti-Judaism emerged, from outside there was a storm of protest
  from Muslim countries with serious threats against the Christians living there
  as small minorities. In order to save the furniture from the burning house it
  was decided to integrate the envisaged Declaration as one chapter in the Declaration
  about the Non-Christian Religions,
  to be known later with its first words as Nostra
  aetate.  
Yet
  this was a compromise, for Judaism is not one religion among the non-Christian
  religions, but as the Chapter 4 of the Declaration made very clear, 
  Christianity has a particular and a unique relation with Judaism. We
  cannot define Christianity and its identity without making reference to
  Judaism, what is not the case with Islam, Buddhism or any other religion.
  Judaism belongs to the very roots of Christianity. But to share this
  conviction, to formulate it and to find a majority within the Council was not
  an easy accomplishment. It was not only the well known French Archbishop Lefèbvre
  who raised opposition to, but many others, especially from countries with
  Muslim majorities. 
There
  are two wellknown major decisions of the Council. On the one hand, the
  rejection of all kinds of anti-Semitism and, on the other, the remembrance of
  the Jewish roots of Christianity, our common heritage as sons of Abraham in
  faith. Both positions have in the meantime been incorporated in the binding
  teaching of the Catholic Church.  
The
  present Pope, John Paul II has pursued these insights energetically and has
  deepened both aspects. Anti-Semitism is for him a fierce violation of human
  rights, it is against the dignity of every human person, which is not
  contingent on descent, culture, religion or sex, and it is in strict
  contradiction of what is expounded on the very first page of the Bible, that
  God created the human person, and this means: created every single human
  person, in  his own image and
  likeness, so that therefore every human person possesses an infinite dignity
  which deserves absolute respect from his/her neighbour. 
John
  Paul II has repeated again and again in many circumstances throughout his long
  pontificate that the Jewish people are the chosen and beloved people of God,
  the people of Gods covenant which for Gods faithfulness is never broken
  and is still alive. When he visited the Great Synagogue of Rome he called the
  Jews our elder brothers in the faith of Abraham. On the first Sunday of
  Lent 2000 and in the moving scene on the Western Wall in Jerusalem he prayed
  for forgiveness for all the sins Christians had committed against Jews, he
  called the Shoah the Calvary of the 20th century.  
III.
The
  names of the Sisters of Our Lady of
  Sion, of Cardinal Bea, of Pope John XXIII and John Paul II stand next to
  many others representing a very historical new beginning in Jewish-Christian
  relations. They are witnesses that conversion and new beginning are possible
  even after a long historical period of contempt, slander, polemics and
  oppression. But they point out only to a beginning of a new beginning. Their
  work is still unfinished. So it is correct, when in the invitation to this
  inauguration we read: A new momentum, in the life of SIDIC. 
   
For
  it is necessary to build on the ground which the Council had laid and to
  translate the Conciliar message not only into the language but also into the
  very different individual and regional situations and contexts. The present
  young generation was not yet born when  the
  Council ended 37 years ago; it represents for them quite remote history,
  almost a prediluvial period. So we must transmit the Councils message
  again and again to the new young generation. Overcoming anti-Semitism and
  fostering positive and friendly relations between our faith communities cannot
  be done once for all, for it is a permanent educational task. I congratulate
  and thank therefore the Pontifical Gregorian University for the wisdom and the
  courage to take over and to make its own this important task. I hope and wish
  that other Pontifical Universities an Faculties follow this example and insert
  in their regular programs studies on Judaism.   
  
A
  second task must also be called upon. Fundamental theological problems also
  remain unsolved. The inherent difficulties from this point of view are
  reflected in the heated debate now underway in the USA on a paper of the
  National Councils of Synagogues and Delegates of the Bishops Committee
  on Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs
  with the title: Reflections on Covenant
  and Mission. 
As
  we are well aware, the problem of mission the paper deals with has been for
  long time a fundamental but also a highly delicate question in
  Jewish-Christian relations, a question which touches bitter historical
  remembrances on forced conversions but also questions of Jewish and of
  Christian identity and their constitutive differences. For Christians the
  problem of mission is intimately linked with what constitutes the fundamental
  difference between us: our faith in Jesus the Christ. As Christians we cannot
  renounce giving witness of this our faith to all and we cannot remain silent
  on our hope in Jesus we call the Christ. Dialogue is only serious and honest
  when it withstands differences and recognises the other in his or her
  otherness.  
It
  is worthy of merit that the paper raises the problem on the agenda. But as
  fundamental questions of identity are implied, no fast solutions and probably
  also no harmonious solution can be expected. Though I am quoted twice, it is
  not my paper and not my position. I take the paper as what it is meant to be:
  an invitation and a challenge for discussion. The paper urges for a way
  forward to completion and to further discussion on the question, but is not
  the final answer. Thus, there is still a lot to do for the Cardinal
  Bea Centre to implement the new basis of Vatican II and to struggle
  towards a satisfactory Christian theology of Judaism. 
 IV.
These
  incidental remarks lead to a thorny question, with which I will deal with very
  soon on an other occasion. In our context, I would like to discuss three other
  future tasks and challenges. These come under three basic Biblical categories.
  
1.
  I will begin with the Remembrance category. Remembrance (sechêr,
  anamnesis, memoria) is a
  fundamental category of both the Old and the New Testament, and therefore a
  fundamental concept of our two traditions. Judaism and Christianity live from
  a narrative tradition, in which the narrating past is at all times actual,
  effective and powerful. Could anything be more central for Judaism than the
  memory of the liberation from Egypt on Pesach-Feast? What is Christianity if
  not the memoria passionis et
  resurrectionis? 
For
  modern Judaism, the memory of the Shoah has become a new identitymaking
  point of reference. It is not a question of mythicizing Auschwitz, as is the
  danger in many post-Auschwitz theologies. But Jews and Christians alike, as
  well as all people of good will, should keep Auschwitz in their memory. We
  remember (1998) is the title of the Vatican document on this subject. We
  remember means: We cannot and we must not forget. Today and in the
  future, since the number of direct witnesses of that period is diminishing, it
  is an essential educational task to pass on the knowledge of historical events
  to the new generation.
Memoria
  is also Remembering for the Future, as Yehuda Bauer termed it in his opus
  magnum on the Shoah; as memoria
  futuri, it involves clarifying the past, cleansing memory (purification
  memoriae) as a warning for the future and an opening for a new common
  future.
Remembrance
  contradicts a widespread superficial conception of happiness. Friedrich
  Nietzsche held that fortunately we are able also to forget, and that only by
  forgetting does happiness become happiness. In contrast, Johannes Baptist Metz
  has rightly spoken of the need of a new culture of remembrance in opposition
  to the modern culture devoid of memory and history.
The
  Church should not fear confronting the historical truth; at any rate, she
  should not be afraid of the historical truth, but rather pay respect to it. To
  this end, the archives of the Holy See are being made available for historical
  research; beginning from next year (2003), the entire correspondence between
  the Holy See and the then government of the German Reich up until 1939 should
  be accessible.  
Yet,
  remembrance is more than history. Memorial events and holocaust commemoration
  sites, which attract foremost prominence in the present public debate, are
  unquestionably significant; but they can also acquire the function of storing
  the past, laying it aside and packaging it in order to take it out again on
  solemn occasions as some sort of valuable family keepsake. In our information
  society pretty much everything can be stored. But storing information is not
  remembering. Remembrance takes place there where our soul is branded; only
  when it aches can a process of healing start. Remembrance must therefore bring
  about a turning back and thus  God willing  a bestowal of
  reconciliation. 
2.
  The second category pertains to Messianic awareness. Judaism and Christianity
  are religions in which there is not only the backward glance, but also a
  promise for the future arising from the past. In both religions the world is
  open ahead to the kingdom of life, of freedom and of peace. 
No
  unrealistic worldly utopia of the future can originate from such hope. Indeed, 
  we both know from bitter experience that those who want to attain
  heaven on earth will turn earth into hell. The rediscovery of the messianic
  means something else; it is not a matter of some vague plans to improve the
  world. The rabbinic tradition has expressed what is meant here in the
  sentence: He who saved has one human being has saved the world.
The
  rediscovery of the messianic means becoming aware of our historical world
  responsibility from the perspective of hope. It is a matter of doing the
  truth. In this, Jews and Christians  for so long adversaries when not
  merely indifferent to each other  should strive to become allies. They have
  a great common heritage to oversee: the common image of mankind, the unique
  human dignity and responsibility before God, the understanding of the world as
  creation, the concept of justice and peace, the worth of the family, the hope
  of definitive salvation and fulfilment.
These
  understandings are among the very foundations of our Western culture; today
  they run the risk of falling into oblivion and being disregarded. Cultural and
  moral depravation seem imminent. After the tragedy of the Shoah, Jews and
  Christians alike are challenged to intervene and are responsible for
  preventing that decline, in which the West and the whole world risks losing
  its soul. If that happened, the Shoah and the destruction of all religious and
  cultural values would have taken place a second and final time.
In
  this perspective, in the future our dialogue should not only deal with
  religious questions of principle; nor should it be dedicated only to
  clarifying the past. Our common heritage should be profitably made available
  in response to contemporary challenges: to issues involving the sanctity of
  life, the protection of the family, justice and peace in the world, the
  hostages of terrorism, and the integrity of creation, among others. 
It
  is our task to pass on to the new generations the treasures and values we have
  in common, so that never again will man despise his own brother in humanity
  and never again will conflicts or wars be unleashed in the name of an ideology
  that despises a culture or religion. On the contrary, the different religious
  traditions are called together to put their patrimony at the service of all,
  in the hope of building the common European home together, united in justice,
  peace, equity and solidarity (John Paul II to the European Jewish-Christian
  Congress in Paris on January 28-29, 2002). 
3.
  Finally, the third category pertaining to dialogue. The Bible
  considers humans as dialogical beings in relation with God, and in relation
  with one another. Not without good reason has it been that Jewish thinkers 
  Martin Buber, Emmanuel Levinas  have ardently proposed the paradigm of
  dialogical thought to a onesided civilization marked by individualism, and
  have inspired us to discern that it is in the countenance of the other, in
  confronting the otherness of the other, that we discover ourselves. Not only
  do we undertake dialogue, we are dialogue.
Meanwhile
  dialogue has become a fashionable byword grown shabby by overuse, a worn
  out coin.  In our own particular
  context, the word refers to ecumenical, interreligious, social, inner-church,
  and also to Jewish-Christian dialogue. Often such dialogue does not go beyond
  polite expressions of friendliness. That is still better than violent dispute.
  But is there not also the danger of minimization, of just tolerating each
  other, the risk of relativization, indifferentism, patchwork identity? In this
  sense one does not or cannot authentically bear and respect the otherness of
  the other.
The
  Jewish-Christian dialogue cannot be of that kind. Jews and Christians, with
  all they have in common in their fundamental understandings, in the
  fundamental conceptions which are constitutive for their respective
  identities, are and remain different. These differences concern their
  religious convictions on the question of God and Christ, their notions of
  world redemption or otherwise, their different practices in the order of
  Sabbath and meals, as well as their attitude to what the Jews call ha-arez,
  the land, and what  after 1945 and after the foundation of the State
  of Israel in 1948  is determined now more than ever by their political
  views. Therefore we should not approach the Jewish-Christian dialogue with naïve
  expectations of a harmonious understanding. It will remain a difficult
  dialogue.
Yet,
  precisely when we do not simplemindedly ignore our otherness, but rather
  bear with it, can we learn from each other. Still much is to be done. There is
  considerable ignorance on both sides, and ignorance is one of the roots of
  reciprocal prejudice. For that reason we are at present considering how to
  include some basic knowledge of Judaism in the training of future priests;
  conversely, the training of future rabbis should include some basic knowledge
  of Christianity. 
Ultimately,
  relations between Jews and Christians cannot be reduced to a simple formula
  and even less so can it be raised to a higher synthesis. Franz Rosenzweig and
  others have spoken of a mutual completion. Yet, Rabbi Professor Michael Signer
  (Chicago) is certainly right when he states that their highly tense relation
  can only be expressed through images and symbols.
One
  such image is found in the interpretation of the prophet Zechariah by rabbinic
  theology. The prophet looks into the messianic future where the peoples are
  taken into the alliance with Israel. On that day the Lord will be one and
  his name one (14:9). According to rabbinic interpretation all of us, Jews
  and all peoples, will stand shoulder to shoulder.
Only
  at the end of time shall the historically indissoluble relation between Israel
  and the church find a solution. Until then though they may not be united in
  one anothers arms, neither should they turn their backs to each other. They
  should stand shoulder to shoulder as partners, and  in a world where the
  glimmer of hope has grown faint  together they must strive to radiate the
  light of hope without which no human being and no people can live. Young
  people especially need this common witness to the hope of peace in justice and
  solidarity. Never again contempt, hatred, oppression and persecution between
  races, between cultures and between religions!
Jews
  and Christians together can maintain this hope. For they can testify from the
  bitter and painful lessons of history that  despite otherness and
  foreignness and despite historical guilt conversion  reconciliation, peace
  and friendship are possible. May thus the new century become a century of
  brotherhood  shoulder to shoulder. Shalom!