Jewish
Reflections on John Paul II
April 8, 2005
Rabbi Gary S. Creditor
In the Midrash on Ecclesiastes (1:13) it says: "No man leaves
the world with half of his desires fulfilled." In this week
of homage to Pope John Paul II the life of his papacy is being
scrutinized from every perspective. It is an understatement to
say, that a man who ruled over approximately one acre of land without
an army or air force, whose weapons were words and whose armor
was faith, was one of the prime forces to affect human destiny
for over a quarter of a century. He wielded the power of his position
with delicate skill and guided the Catholic Church during internal
controversy amid a contentious world. To me, like most, Cardinal
Karol Wojtyla of Krakow. While the world had its own agenda, we
were seeking a Pope that would continue the work of Pope John XXIII.
We did not know what to expect of this new Polish Pope. In reflection
over the twenty-six years of his reign it would be proper, appropriate
and necessary to say, that a better, more divinely chosen individual
could not have been selected by the College of Cardinals. I dare
say that they didn't know what they had done. Yet like the quote
from Ecclesiastes, our view of the man and legacy must be balanced,
for only part of our hopes were fulfilled, maybe even more than
we could have expected, yet there remain issues for his successor
that are unresolved. In contemplation of the wider panorama, we
should not lose sight of our continuing agenda, even as we give
thanks to God and praise the name of Pope John Paul II.
To properly appreciate the magnitude of these issues that connect
Judaism and the Jewish with the Catholic Church we must view the
core issue in which Pope John Paul II was a revolutionary. He reinforced,
exemplified, spoke consistently and unhesitantly in changing and
repudiating the basic belief of the Church in supersessionsism:
That the Church had replaced Israel in the covenant with God because
of the Crucifixion. All issues between the Catholic Church and
Judaism must be seen through this prism. He changed the tenor,
tone and substance of the relationship of the Church to the Jewish
people and Judaism. While it has been a process begun with Pope
John XXIII and it is not completed, yet it has been brought to
an extremely high level of fruition by this Pope. For this we give
thanks and give praise.
What are key pieces in our unfinished or differing agenda that
remains for his successor? Rabbi Leon Klenicki, former director
of ADL's Department of Interfaith Affairs, in an article for The
Jewish Week of New York indicated the following:
- Opening the Vatican Archives. The Vatican has granted only
partial access to its extensive collections of documents from
World War II. While there is much there that is not of strictly
Jewish concern, it will cast a more accurate light on Pope Pius
XII and his silence over the Holocaust. Perhaps by viewing his
silence, by seeing in detail how that silence enabled, abetted,
the murder of the Jews of Europe, it might spur the bishops and
cardinals of Europe to denounce present anti-Semitism all over
Europe and France. This is a subject for our ongoing dialogue.
- While Pope John Paul II issued a mea culpa for the role of
Christians as individuals in the Holocaust, there is lingering
resentment that the Church qua Church has not acknowledged its
responsibility. According to Rabbi Klenicki, the original draft
was written to say that but was edited by the Vatican secretary
of State. The Pope let the change stand.
- The canonization of Edith Stein, the Jewish born nun who died
in Auschwitz and of Pope Pius XII to whom I just referred has
caused continuing upset.
- He stayed on the sidelines for a long time concerning
the convent built by Carmelite nuns at Auschwitz. Only after
considerable upset did he step in. Rabbi Avi Weiss must be
credited with keeping this issue high on the agenda.
Like any world leader, the Pope does not work in a vacuum. He is at the center
of a political vortex, and no matter what the issue, regardless of his position,
is challenged by his own political system. He has his own factions
and competing wings of the Church. Even in these four issues, I believe that
he tried to balance his own convictions and competing political counter pressures.
There remained one further issue.
- In 1987 he met with Kurt Waldheim and in 1982 with Yasir Arafat.
One was a Nazi with a past and other a murder of terrorist organization.
While the Pope met with many people, these two rankled and upset
the relationship that he so ardently worked to create and enhance.
With the list of issues that might seem minor yet in their time
and with their consequences loomed major, for the follow reasons
of substance, Pope John Paul II will be remembered with fondness,
respect and esteem:
On June 7th, 1979 at his visit to Auschwitz, only sixty miles from his center
in Krakow, he declared that no one can look on the Nazi genocide of Jews with
indifference.
- On April 13th, 1986 in Rome, he is the first Pope to
visit a synagogue in the history of Catholic Church, he
call us "our
elder brothers."
- On December 30th, 1993 in Rome and
Jerusalem, diplomatic relations are established between
the Vatican and the State of Israel.
- On March 12th, 2000 in
Rome he prays publicly to God for forgiveness of Christian
sins against the Jews during the past millennium. This statement
is far-reaching for while it refers to the Holocaust it truly
extends throughout the history of the Church, particularly
the Crusades.
- On March 26th, 2000 in Jerusalem,
he prays at the Kotel, formally committing the Catholic Church "to
genuine fellowship with the people of the Covenant."
The world is larger than just us and has many more issues than
ours. Yet it is clear that Pope John Paul II made a revolution
in the Catholic Church in its posture and core teachings about
Judaism, about Jews, about our history and about our destiny. While
it has not eradicated anti-Semitism and not everyone necessarily
embraces what he taught, it is now part of Church doctrine and
teaching that would be hard if not impossible to remove or alter.
For this we give thanks and we give praise to his memory.
Perhaps it is the last point that I cited his prayer at the Kotel,
which encapsulates the essential matter. For the first time in
the history of the Catholic Church, its supreme leader acknowledged
the validity and ongoing existence of the Covenant made between
God and the Jewish people, that covenant which is at the core of
Judaism and being a Jew; that the Covenant which Christianity believes
that is has with God did not supersede or eliminate or invalidate
ours; and that the tension between the two should be filled with
respect; that the tension is never the basis for hatred, anti-Semitism
or persecution. No leader has ever been so bold. No leader has
ever rewritten its core theology as Pope John Paul II. For this
we give eternal thanks and highest praise.
In brevity I cite a few of his most important statements.
"Jews are the people of God of the Old Covenant, never revoked by God…the
present-day people of the Covenant concluded with Moses."
"Through myself, the Church, in the words of the well-known Declaration
Nostra Aetate, "deplores the hatred, persecutions and displays of anti-Semitism
directed against the Jews at any time and by anyone;" I repeat: "by
any one."
"The Jewish religion is not 'extrinsic' to us, but in a certain way is 'intrinsic'
to our own religion. With Judaism therefore we have a relationship which we do
not have with any other religion. You are our dearly beloved brothers and, in
a certain way, it could be said that you are our elder brothers."
"It will continue to be an explicit and very important part of my mission
to repeat and emphasize that our attitude to the Jewish religion should be one
of the greatest respect, since the Catholic faith is rooted in the eternal truths
contained in the Hebrew Scriptures, and in the irrevocable covenant made with
Abraham. We, too, gratefully hold these same truths of the Jewish heritage and
look upon you as our brothers and sisters in the Lord. For the Jewish people
themselves, Catholics should have not only respect but also great fraternal love
for it is the teaching of both the Hebrew and Christian Scriptures that the Jews
are beloved of God, who has called them with an irrevocable calling. No valid
theological justification could ever be found for acts of discrimination or persecution
against Jews. In fact, such acts must be held to be sinful."
"In April of this year (1980), the bishops of the Federal Republic of Germany
stated: 'Whoever meets Jesus Christ meets Judaism.' I would like to make these
words mine as well."
And lastly, his prayer at the Western Wall:
"God of our fathers,
You chose Abraham and his descendants to ring Your name to the nations:
We are deeply saddened by the behavior of those who in the course of history
have caused these children of Yours to suffer
And asking Your forgiveness we wish to commit ourselves to genuine fellowship
with the people of the Covenant."
I post script this brief story. When the Pope met the leaders of American Jewry
in Castel Gandolfo near Rome, in the center of the room was a table with Hebrew
and Latin copies of the Bible. Just the Jewish Scriptures and not the New Testament.
The chairs were placed in a circle. While the Pope's chair would normally have
been elevated he gave specific instructions that he would sit on the same chair
as everyone else, and at the same height. One should dwell at length on the
meaning and import of that scene.
We as a congregation join with the Jewish people in mourning the death of an
extraordinary man, and exceptional leader, a friend and a visionary. We give
thanks for his religious pioneering efforts in the dramatic reconciliation
between the Catholic Church and Judaism, between Christians and Jews. The world
we live in could not be what it is without his efforts. We praise his courage
and extend deep condolences to the Catholic community, locally and world wide.
Rabbi Kook, who was the first chief Rabbi of the Jewish community, in then
called Palestine, wrote these words which so clearly apply to Pope John Paul
II:
The purely righteous do not complain about evil, but they add justice;
They do not complain about heresy, but they add faith;
They do not complain about ignorance but they add wisdom.
May the soul of Pope John Paul II be received with love into God's sheltering
presence and for all his labors be blessed with eternal peace. Amen. |