Sunday, October 30, 2005

Are Jews testing Catholic Church on Nostra Aetate

Tonight I came across an article stating that we Catholics were not supposed to convert Jews. I nearly spit an entire mouth-- full off good beer onto my keyboard when I read this trash.

The Catholic Church has nobody blame but themselves [1e: Pope John Paul 11], for statemnts coming out of Jewish publications like this one which comes from the article in the Jewish Post which I have taken liberty to reference below.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
quote:
"Even though the Nostra Aetate says that no attempts should be made to convert Jews, many Catholics continue to express a hope for conversion," he told The Jerusalem Post from Rome during the Vatican's 40th anniversary celebration of the Nostra Aetate document, which revolutionized the Catholic Church's relations with Jews.
_____________________________________________________________________________________
If one reads "Nostra Aetate" in its entirety,you will find no mention of any proclamation that indicates Catholics will cease from converting Jews. One might however get the impression from the actions of the previous Pope--that he intended to roll over and play tricks for any and all religious organizations that allowed him into their places of worship.

I suspect that the Jews are willing to test how much the new Pope is willing to bend in "his" relations with other religious faiths.

Nostea Aetate for those unfamiliar, was the declaration on the relations of the Catholic Church to non-Christian religions issued October 28, 1962 by Pope Paul V1 as part of the second Vatican Council.

In my opinion, the more we must live with that councils proclamations, the further the church slides from it's true nature as founded by Jesus Christ. Jesus was a Jew--but that did not stop him from spreading the "good news" to everyone in his path--including fellow Jews.

Benedict XV1 has only been in office a few months and I await to see whether he intends to follow Jesus or follow Vatican 11. The church's attempt at modernization in my mind has failed miserably. It is just such fiascos like this document that distorts and confuses Christians. It is high time for the church leadership to return the church to its roots, quit being religious Emperors, and start being Vicars of Christ--as was intended.

The very idea that Catholics would cease welcoming into salvation those ouside the church is beyond comprehension. However it is easy to see why the Jews and others are confused about Christ's mission and the efforts of todays church leaders to follow his lead. There have simply been too many proclamations over the centuries that are the product of our church leaders egos--outside the sancity of the Holy Ghost.

Well Yodi--I see you are shaking your head in dis-belief too. It is time for some prayers on behalf of the Holy Mother Church---another crack has been uncovered.

Referenced article:
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Oct. 27, 2005 19:41 | Updated Oct. 27, 2005 19:59
AJC asks Catholics not to convert Jews
By MATTHEW WAGNER


The Catholic Church should categorically reject any attempts to convert Jews, the American Jewish Committee's Rabbi David Rosen said Thursday.

"Even though the Nostra Aetate says that no attempts should be made to convert Jews, many Catholics continue to express a hope for conversion," he told The Jerusalem Post from Rome during the Vatican's 40th anniversary celebration of the Nostra Aetate document, which revolutionized the Catholic Church's relations with Jews.

Rosen, the AJC's international director of interreligious affairs, has been involved in Vatican-Israeli negotiations for more than a decade.

He and Cardinal Jean-Marie Lustiger, a retired Paris Archbishop and Jewish convert, were to be the keynote speakers Thursday evening.

Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of the Holy See's Commission for Religious Relations with Jewry, is hosting the event.

The Nostra Aetate was one of the key documents to emerge from the 1962-65 Second Vatican Council meeting of Catholics and clergy that modernized the Catholic Church.

In it, the Vatican deplored anti-Semitism in every form and repudiated the deicide charge that blamed the Jews for Christ's death.

Rosen, commenting on the issue of Catholic proselytizing, said many
prominent Church theologians such as Kasper consider any attempts to convert Jews, even unobtrusive invitations, inappropriate and unnecessary.

"But some theologians, like Cardinal [Avery] Dulles interpret the Nostra Aetate differently," he said. "Although they eschew proselytizing, they hold that an open invitation to convert is permitted."

Rosen said differences of opinion on conversion of Jews might stem from varying theological positions on redemption for Jews.

Catholic theologians who hope for the conversion of Jews believe that although Jews are not condemned by God, they are not in His favor.
Therefore, it is legitimate to hope for Jews conversion to Catholicism.

Those who reject conversion as inappropriate and unnecessary would be more likely to accept the idea that Jews are eligible for spiritual redemption in the world to come, he said.

Notwithstanding his criticism on the issue of conversions, Rosen called the Nostra Aetate a "mind-boggling revolution in the Catholic Church's theology."

"This might sound like a hyperbole, but there is nothing quite comparable in the history of humankind," he said. "Imagine a billion followers who had been taught contempt for the Jews and Judaism, who had been inculcated with the idea that the Jew was in league with the devil, suddenly being taught that the Jews are the people of the covenant. Or as Pope John Paul II put it, the Jews are 'our dearly beloved older brother.'"

Rosen said the Nostra Aetate also opened the way for diplomatic relations between the State of Israel and the Vatican by recognizing the land of Israel as the ancestral home of the Jewish people.

"Thanksgiving to God is appropriate for the incredible turnaround in Church thought," he said.

Several ceremonies are scheduled for next week in Israel. The Center for the Study of Christianity at Hebrew University will sponsor a three-day conference on various aspects of the document. Rabbi Shear Yishuv Hacohen, president of the Bilateral Commission for Dialogue between the Vatican and the Chief Rabbinate of Israel, will speak at the AJC's headquarters in Jerusalem and there will be a special ceremony at Beit Hanassi.

Rosen will be honored with the Mount Zion Award 2005 on the occasion of the Nostra Aetate anniversary for his contribution to reconciliation between Jews and Catholics. The award will be presented by Kasper.

AP contributed to this report.

No comments: