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GregoryPope
Guest
You bring up some interesting points, but what exactly is the difference between condemning a group or condemning every individual in a group if people likewise suffer the same consequences?I think part of the tension here is between an ancient/tribal idea of corporate guilt and a modern/individualist idea of personal guilt.
If, in ancient Palestine or Medieval Italy or even some of the most savage areas of the world today (like our city ghettos), a person from one family or tribe or even nation committed, say, a murder against another group, their entire group could be relied upon to defend him, while the injured group would consider it justice to kill a member of the rival clan. Whether the individual killed had any knowledge much less approval of the original crime was inconsequential; he was a part of the offending clan. It was a mentality based on the very strong local and family group cohesion of the time plus the great difficulty of meting out individual justice in a tribal context.
This is very different from the way things are done today, but perhaps not necessarily entirely wrong. The Bible certainly seems to take such an ethic for granted, though this does not prove it is right any more than the early parts of the Bible, which take polygamy for granted, prove that polygamy is right. God may just have been biding his time before guiding people to a better morality.
Still, God Himself certainly seems to work in a similar way at times. Not every Israelite was guilty of idolatry and oppression of the poor, yet for these crimes first the Northern and then the Southern Kingdoms were destroyed by the Mesopotamians. Many innocent people no doubt suffered and died for the sins of other members of the nation. This may be a part of the original sense of the Suffering Servant passages of Isaiah, passages that in a more profound sense connect to the suffering of Christ.
I dare say it is a similar situation with the Jews of the First Century and the destruction of Jerusalem. Their abandonment of God, beginning perhaps with the corruption and adoption of the title “king” by the Hasmonean High Priests, then the overwhelming rush to Rome to solve their problems, then finally the rejection and condemnation of Jesus by much of the Jewish leadership and a crowd incited to madness, finally calling out “we have no king but Caesar!” and “crucify him!”, followed by the persecution of the Church, sometimes in collusion with Rome- all these things culminated, on a grand scale, in the unsuccessful Jewish revolt, the destruction of Jerusalem and the expulsion of many Jews from the Holy Land. Non-Christian Judaism may validly be said to in some ways perpetuate the rebellion and spiritual blindness of these First Century non-Christian Jews, and so some connection could be made between the guilt of the two.
Today, we rarely think along these lines. We assume that moral condemnation of a group implies moral condemnation of each person in that group individually. Corporate condemnation of that sort would very rarely be justified, and certainly would not be justified towards the Jews of today, or even the Jews in Jerusalem on Good Friday. Such corporate condemnation, reinterpreted in an individualistic way, is rightly rejected by the Church as prejudice and even bigotry. I doubt many Church Fathers would have held the assumption that if the Jews as a whole are guilty of the blood of Christ then any given individual Jew, first century or later, is personally guilty. Today an assertion of corporate guilt would carry exactly that implication, and so in a modern context such an assertion must be rejected.
It’s not the Church’s beliefs that have changed, it is the world around Her, and a change of language and emphasis is therefore needed.