Christians must choose between antisemitism and joining Jews
Christians have to make a choice – “either retain their present belief system
and be antisemitic or form a partnership with the Jewish people.”
This is the view of Bar-Ilan University’s Rabbi Dr. Pinchas Hayman, who is
active in Jewish-Christian dialogue and in encouraging modern Christianity to
return to its Jewish roots by observing the Seven Noahide Laws. Rabbi Dr. Pinchas Hayman
Excerpts:
CHRISTIANS have to make a choice – “either retain their present belief system
and be antisemitic or form a partnership with the Jewish people.”
This is the view of Bar-Ilan University’s Rabbi Dr. Pinchas Hayman, who is
active in Jewish-Christian dialogue and in encouraging modern Christianity to
return to its Jewish roots by observing the Seven Noahide Laws.
“As long as Christians keep Jesus as God, they will be antisemitic because
that belief must lead them to believe that those who reject Jesus reject God,”
he told the Australian Jewish News.
“That’s how the process of satanising the Jews began. That belief is the root
cause of 1500 years of the Christian idolatrous antisemitism which led to the
Holocaust.”
Proficient in New Testament Studies and Classical Greek, Dr. Hayman noted
that at least five American churches have given up belief in Jesus.
Start:
Friday, July 26, 1996
Melbourne Edition (Vol. 62, no. 43, p. 9)
Courtesy of the National Library of Austalia
http://www.comeandhear.com/supplement/ajn-hayman/ajn-page.html
Israel as a Jewish state
Visiting Bar-Ilan University academic Rabbi Dr. Pinchas Hayman talks to Shira
Sebban about his vision of Israel
ISRAEL should be a moderate religious state based on authentic Jewish rather
than borrowed western values, a visiting Israeli educator said this week.
“Separation of church and state is a Western concept based on the assumption
that Judaism is a religion, Bar-Ilan University Jewish education and Talmudic
studies lecturer Rabbi Dr. Pinchas Hayman told the Australian Jewish News.
“But that’s false,” he said. “Judaism is our national identity and Halacha is
the Jewish national legal system. Israel’s system of government is borrowed
from non-Jewish nations.
“If China was told to borrow its system from the United States, it would
regard the suggestion as ludicrous. Jewish society is spiritual and its goal is to
be value-oriented.
“If Israel doesn’t develop its public Jewish identity, its right to exist in
the Middle East should be questioned. Our claim to the Land of Israel is based
on the fact that our Jewish identity asks us to create a highly ethical
Jewish society, not just another secular democracy.”
But Dr. Hayman stressed that Judaism is not repressive, advocating that a
Halachic society be implemented gradually in Israel “so as not to shock anyone”.
One way would be to follow the recommendation of a group of academics that a
second house of parliament be set up in the form of a Sanhedrin, which would
work with the Knesset to pass legislation.
In Australia as the guest of the Friends of Bar-Ilan University, Dr. Hayman,
who went on aliyah from the United States nine years ago, described Bar-Ilan
as “a bridge-building institution which creates a laboratory for sensitive
relations between religious and non-religious, Sephardis and Ashkenazis”.
Although Yigal Amir – who assassinated Yltzhak Rabin – was a student at
Bar-Ilan, no institution should be judged on the basis of one of its members and an
external commission had given the university a clean bill of health, he said.
Dr. Hayman accused the Israeli media, which he said was unfairly critical of
Bar-Ilan after the Rabin assassination, of being “extremist secularists”,
trying to destroy the image of Israel’s religious population because it felt
threatened.
Much of the talk of a religious revival in Israel is media hype, he charged.
“When it wants to portray Israel’s religious community, the media seeks out
extremists. It never portrays the moderate religious majority, which is made up
of responsible, balanced individuals.”
He was equally scathing of extremist elements within the Charedi community
which portray the Zionist state as anti-Jewish. “Charedi society is the
flip-side of the secularists; the extremists on each side cause extremism in the other
camp, but balance each other out,” he said.
“The majority of Israelis have a healthy approach to Jewish identity. The new
government was elected in response to the outrageous anti-religious approach
of the previous administration, particularly within Meretz. Israel is slowly
growing up.”
In his capacity as director of Bar-Ilan’s Lookstein Centre for Jewish
Education in the Diaspora, Dr. Hayman is concerned with the creation of a school
system which teaches children to absorb Jewish values. The Centre develops
curricula and trains teachers for Jewish schools throughout the world.
“The rotting of Jewish communities around the world is so great that even if
there were 10 Lookstein Centres, 10 Melton Institutes and 10 Jewish Agencies,
there would be more than enough work for all of us,” Dr. Hayman said.
Dr. Hayman took part in last week’s Fourth Biennial Conference on Jewish
Education in Sydney and this week’s public education forum at Kimberley Gardens.
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