Actually, it’s not confusing at all. The Church’s position is very clear.
- God has a plan.
- The Church will no condone or support any organized plan to convert the Jews.
- There is nothing to stop Christians from giving witness to their faith, even among the Jews provided that the Christian respects the boundaries that the Jews set up. If they ask, we respond. If they want to learn, we teach. If they say “enough.”, be back off.
The directions are very explicit.
This has been the practice of the great missionaries among the Jews for centuries, beginning in 1219 in Jerusalem, later with the Dominicans in Spain, later again with the Catholics in Poland who welcomed the Jews and did not bother them and such great men as Francis of Assisi, Vincent Ferrer, Vincent de Paul, John XXIII, John Paul II and now Benedict XVI.
It’s really interesting, because the push to convert the Jews has never come from the Vatican. It has always come from the bottom up. The Holy See has always walked on egg shells on that subject. It never came out against it and never established a formal plan either. I believe that part of it may have been, because some of the push to convert Jews was more political than religious zeal.
In Spain, the Spanish government was very hard on them and pushed them into ghettos. Had it not been for the Dominicans and Franciscans who stood in the way between the crown and the Jews, the Jews in Spain would have been forced to convert to Christianity. The Franciscans have done much during the last 800 years to persuade the Holy See to have Catholics treat the Jews with respect and not to push them to Christianity. The Dominicans have always argued that the Jews have a special place in God’s plan and that Jesus will find a way to bring them into the Church. They are not lost, except for those who refuse to enter when the time comes. The Carmelites have always protected the rights of the Jews to exist as a religion, which will find its way to the fulfillment of the covenant. In other words, the covenant has been fulfilled. These people have to realize this on their own, without our pushing.
Catholic history is very clear that the concern with the conversion of the Jews is from individuals, not a collective concern of the Church. The Church prays that the Jewish people will recognize Christ as the Messiah promised to our fathers and she invites the Jewish people to come along and explore this possibility. But she does not want to endorse any kind of campaign.
Part of this may also have to do with the Church’s dislike for Protestant proselytism. You know, the guys who knock on your door on a Saturday morning asking you if you have been saved or who want to tell you about the bible. Though we have door to door apostolaates which are very good, we don’t walk in assuming that someone has not been saved as do these other missionaries from other Christian traditions. The Catholic approach is always to invite, to to condemn.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, FFV