|
|
|
|
|
|
Still, even non-violent incidents cannot be dismissed as merely words or pranks. The Jewish heritage, as one person put it, comes with a “paranoia /confirmed by history.” The ADL is correct to warn that the anti-Semitic poison currently rampant on Twitter, Facebook, and especially social media sites like Gab, find their way into mainstream discourse and, in extreme cases, inspire violence.
* Paranoia is a persistent, irrational feeling that people are 'out to get you' or of constantly being watched or listened to.
As
Christians /called by God to this cultural moment, it’s not enough to
merely avoid being anti-Semitic.
We ought oppose this vile ideology /wherever and whenever we come across it.
* come across; meet or find by chance.
Years ago, at an inter-faith dialogue /featuring a Hindu, a Muslim, a Jew, a Buddhist, and me, a skeptic asked the three monotheists: “If your God is a God of love, why do you proselytize others?”
* Proselytize definition, to convert or attempt to convert as a proselyte; recruit.
Setting aside the loaded postmodern assumptions in the question itself, I remember being surprised by the answer /given by the representative of Judaism, “We don’t proselytize,” he said. “We believe () God made a special arrangement with us through our father Abraham. If He made a deal with any of you, we don’t know.”
Christians, of course, agree that God made a special arrangement with Abraham. However, Christians also understand that in that agreement, God launched his plan of redemption and that through Israel, “all nations on earth will be blessed” (Gen 22:18). This, of course, God did through Jesus, who was, as the Scriptures make abundantly clear, thoroughly Jewish.
In a short piece on anti-Semitism, Francis Schaeffer wrote “…we should keep constantly in our minds that our Lord Himself was a Jew—born a Jew, lived a Jew, died a Jew.” And we should remember, as Russell Moore wrote in his blog, Jesus remains a Jew. As fully God and fully man, He was not resurrected from His Jewishness. So, as Moore bluntly put it, “to hate Jews is to hate Jesus.”
In light of that reality and acknowledging fully the Church’s checkered past /when it comes to the Jewish people, we must not allow the tiniest whiff of anti-Semitism into in our heads, our homes, or our hearts. We hear too much of it today, sometimes in the name of preserving Christian America. There’s nothing, and I mean nothing, Christian about anti-Semitism in any form. As the little poem quoted by Francis Schaeffer back in 1943 reads,
“How odd of God to choose the Jew,
But not so odd as those who choose
The Jewish God and hate the Jew.”
사람들은 유대인을 선택하신 하아님이 얼나마 특이하신 가 하나
유대인의 하나님을 선택하고도
유대인을 증오하는 사람들은 너무나도 특이한 사람들이다
아래는 나의 자작시
How odd of me to choose the God of love
사랑의 하나님을 나의 하나님으로 선택한 나도
and to hate people created in the image of God.
하나님의 형상으로 창조된 다른 사람들을 미워하면
얼마나 특이한 인물인가