Condemning Israel While Trying to Purge Christianity of Its Jewish Roots https://mosaicmagazine.com/picks/israel-zionism/2024/03/condemning-israel-while-trying-to-purge-christianity-of-its-jewish-roots/

March 5, 2024 | Mark Tooley and Marina Rosenberg
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In a sad moment in the history of Jewish-Christian relations in the U.S., the leaders of the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) have issued a statement accusing Israel of genocide, while also condemning American support for Israel. Mark Tooley notes that, near its end, the statement declares, “We remain in solidarity with Jesus Christ of Nazareth, a Palestinian Jew, and the Prince of Peace.” This reference to Jesus as a Palestinian reflects a disturbing new trend:

Sojourners, a storied religious-left journal, . . . published an article insisting Jesus was Palestinian. The author, who identifies as a Quaker Palestinian in North Carolina, lamented “various fictional accounts found in the Bible, like the story of the Exodus, which some use to justify Zionism and the current apartheid.”

The AME bishops, echoing the Sojourners author, call Jesus a “Palestinian Jew.” Would Jesus have understood Himself in this way? He never referred to it, and Palestine is never cited in the New Testament. Roman soldiers mocked Jesus as “King of the Jews.” He was from Judea. Hebrews of His time did not refer to their land as Palestine. . . . Denying or minimizing Jesus’ Jewishness is unhistorical. It also leads to erasing the Jewish people historically and politically.

Marina Rosenberg, meanwhile, shows us where such attempts to de-Judaize Jesus naturally lead:

During Christmas last year, there was a concerted effort by some Palestinian factions and their supporters worldwide to [convince people that] the current Israel-Hamas war is in fact a Jewish-Christian issue. In the Arab press and across social media, there were invocations of the age-old anti-Semitic trope of deicide—the accusation that Jews killed Jesus—by depicting baby Jesus being targeted by the Israeli army, including when he was born. . . .

These depictions of Jesus also carry the deeper message that as a Palestinian, Jesus was not a Jew.

Such arguments have long been found in the Christian tradition, although they have been routinely rejected by the mainstream. They stretch from the heretical 2nd-century theologian Marcion—who, believing the God of the Hebrew Bible was a wicked lesser deity, wanted to expunge the Old Testament from the canon—to 19th-century German anti-Semites, who argued on pseudo-scholarly grounds that Jesus was not “racially” Jewish. It’s clear that, whatever their form, these trends have always resulted in hatred of Jews.

Read more on Providence: https://providencemag.com/2024/02/when-christmas-is-politicized-to-target-israel/