We have seen that the Two Covenant Theory, the idea that Jewry alone is guaranteed Salvation without any need to convert to Christ, is repugnant to Scripture, to the Fathers, even to the post-Conciliar liturgy of the Catholic Church. It is also subversive of the basic grammar of the relationship between the Old and the New Testaments. Throughout two millennia, in Scripture, in Liturgy, in her classical teachers, the Church of East and West has relied on the hermeneutic of typology ... the relationship between the OT Type and the NT Antitype which fulfills and replaces it. Even non-Christian intellectuals and scholars can understand this. Frank Kermode, in his 1975 classic The Classic gives as examples "Christ makes Jonah the type of his resurrection, and S Paul the crossing of the Red Sea by the Israelites a type of baptism". He goes on: "A type can therefore be identified only by its antitype, a later event in a providentially structured history; the Old Covenant is a type of the New. Types are essentially what Auerbach has in mind when he speaks of figurae, events or persons that are themselves, but may presage others. Their purpose, to put it simply, is to accommodate the events and persons of a superseded order of time to a new one."
To accept the Two Covenant Theory has the advantage that Catholic ecumenists can hold their heads high and win smiles when among their Jewish friends, safe from the fear that they may be accused of antisemitism and bracketed with Adolf Hitler. It has the disadvantage that it requires a radical evisceration of Scripture and of the Liturgy, and a massive expurgation of those texts of the Fathers which will be allowed to be read. Hymns, too, will need to be eliminated or rewritten, even if written by someone of the stature of S Thomas. Do I seem to exaggerate? I will challenge anyone who thinks I do to give a plain answer to this question:
If those who attack 'Supersessionism' get their way, shall we any longer be allowed at Benediction to sing Et antiquum documentum/ novo cedat ritui or, during the Mass of Corpus Christi, ... novum Pascha novae legis,/ Phase vetus terminat.//Vetustatem novitas,/ umbram fugat veritas,/ noctem lux eliminat; all about how 'the Old', 'the Shadow', 'the Night; must give way to, or is put to flight by, 'the New', 'the Light', 'the Truth'?
The Two Covenant Theory, lamentably, has spread so far and so wide that good and well-meaning people speak and write as if it were true, and may hear it even when it is not spoken. Jorge Bergoglio, in a document which is non-Magisterial, wrote "their covenant with God has never been revoked" (EG247). This statement echoed a remark obiter of B John Paul II. Such a formula can and should most certainly be situated in a Magisterial context in which it can be understood and justified (I plan to do this in two later posts). I would be perfectly content to say it myself. But I would feel uneasy if I did not explain further what I meant. Pope Francis wisely followed it by the contextualising remark two paragraphs later that "the Church cannot refrain from proclaiming Jesus as Lord and Messiah". I very much hope that readers read this with as much care (and lengthy thought) as they did his previous remark. If they did so, damage will not have been done.
The fact that even a writer who is also Bishop of Rome can express himself in a way which might seem to some to be ambiguous, brings home to all of us the message that we need to be very careful. And that, the more we encounter this error, the more we are obliged to refute it. This is awkward; sane and pleasant people naturally flinch from expressing themselves in a way which some non-Christian Jews have taught themselves to regard as offensive. In any case, we have better things to do with our time than to spend it offending any members of the Jewish people, especially beloved of God, and running the risk of seeming to some of them to align ourselves with nutters and nasties and plain bonkers Nazis. But:
For all men and women, without exception, Christ is Saviour.
To be continued in just two final posts.
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13 comments:
An Ordinariate for the Jews? How fantastic that would be! Imagine the liturgy ...
Blessed John Paul II created some well-founded consternation when he said that the covenant with the Jews had never been revoked.
However, he clarified his comments during his trip to Sydney when he affirmed that he was speaking about the Abrahamic covenant - not the Mosaic covenant.
Bob Sungenis has a video on the internet in which he goes into this at great length.
This seems to me a very high price to pay for giving a puff to the more intolerant among the Jewish community (particularly those who are so intolerant that they even require Christianity to change as a prerequisite for dialogue).
Thank you, Father.
Has the Catholic Church ever demanded changes in the liturgy of the Jews?
What exactly is dialogue with the Jewish people for?
There are some significant extracts from Benedict available at:
http://www.ccjr.us/dialogika-resources/documents-and-statements/roman-catholic/pope-benedict-xvi/349-b16-99mroc
His view is clearly very nuanced: the Old and New are not two entirely distinct Covenants, but rather two phases of a Covenant God made with Israel and which now embraces all nations. The "Old" derived its efficacy only insofar as it looked forward to Christ, and it still derives whatever efficacy it retains from Him.
If Jesus Christ is true for me, He is true for ALL people.
I would like Father Hunwicke to expatiate on the "covenant not being revoked comment. It has been superceded but not revoked, ie it has served its purpose and therefore didn't need to be revoked. Am I right about this or not?
Actually (and I'm not an expert on this), my understanding is that historically, a Middle Eastern covenant was not really a revocable contract. It was a declaration that A and B were now family to each other.
Breaking a covenant called down curses upon oneself, but it didn't make you not family anymore.
At any rate, if a more powerful party (like a king with a big empire, or God) declared covenant with a less powerful party (like a single city, or Israel), the more powerful party set all the initial terms, and could augment the terms however he wanted. The more powerful party had all the paterfamilias power, and the less powerful party was in the position of a child or a subordinate clanmember, depending on the particular terms of the covenant.
So today's Jews are trying to hold to version 5.1 of the Covenant (post-Abraham, post-Jacob, post-Sinai, post-Baal Peor, post-making up rabbinical Judaism) which is no longer in force, but still effectively makes them part of God's tribe because God doesn't do take-backs with His promises; whereas Catholics are going with version 6.0, which makes us God's actual adopted children. (Although we also have to die in Christ in order to live in Christ.)
The earlier version of the Covenant didn't really promise to be salvific in the same sense as the current version is, so logically it wouldn't have ever been salvific that way. Since it's not the version currently in force, God doesn't have to provide any grace to those currently living under it; but probably He does, because He is merciful and because one can see Jewish people living holy lives and receiving certain graces. This doesn't mean that they don't need to become Christian; and indeed, Jewish converts often receive truly amazing amounts of grace when they convert, as Paul pretty much said about branches getting grafted back in.
The USCCB website:
Q. What does the Church say about the Jewish Covenant and the place of the Jewish people in the economy of salvation?
A. Some have argued that "the New Covenant "abrogated" or "superseded" the Old Covenant, and that the Sinai Covenant was discarded by God and replaced with another made by Jesus. The Second Vatican Council, in Dei Verbum and Nostra Aetate, rejected these ideas. In a major address in 1980, Pope John Paul II linked the renewed understanding of Scripture with the Church's own understanding of her relationship with the Jewish people, stating that the dialogue, as "the meeting between the people of God of the Old Covenant, never revoked by God (cf. Rom. 11.29), and that of the New Covenant is at the same time a dialogue within our Church, that is to say, between the first and the second part of her Bible" (Pope John Paul II, Mainz, November 17, 1980, no. 3)."(cf. also God's Mercy Endures Forever, no. 6)
In short, the Church believes that the Jewish Covenant is still valid and that Jews are still called to fidelity to that Covenant. Further, the Church teaches that the Jewish people belong, in some mysterious way, to the community of the Church.We also believe that the Jewish Covenant finds its fullest expression (fulfillment) in the Covenant of Jesus."While the biblical prophecies of an age of universal shalom are 'fulfilled' (i.e., irreversibly inaugurated) in Christ's coming, that fulfillment is not yet completely worked out in each person's life or perfected in the world at large… It is the mission of the Church, as also that of the Jewish people, to proclaim and to work to prepare the world for the full flowering of God's Reign, which is, but is 'not yet' . Both the Christian 'Our Father' and the Jewish Kaddish exemplify this message. Thus, both Christianity and Judaism seal their worship with a common hope:'Thy kingdom come!'"(God's Mercy Endures Forever, no.11; cf. 1974 "Guidelines and Suggestions for Implementing the Conciliar Declaration Nostra Aetate (no. 4)")
No salvation outside the Church.
Amateur Brain Surgeon has clarified the matter as far as the USCCB is concerned, They have ditched typology, tradition, the church fathers and common sense to serve up a heaping helping of baffle them with baloney. (The last word is usually rendered in a more pungent form).
Well said, Father. Thank you.
Eastern Orthodox reject the idea. A person has to be baptized in order to inherit the Kingdom.
See articles and blogs by Fr. James Bernstein, Antiochian Orthodox priest.
https://orthodoxwiki.org/James_Bernstein
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