I think that view is terribly simplistic and not at all accurate, although popular… From all the research that I have been able to uncover the suspicion and antagonism against the Jews, at least in modern times, did not primarily come from the Passion accounts. It came more from their separitism from the populace at large and their perceived aloofness from the local populace… In Germany for instance, the Jews were predominantly businessmen ,merchants, shop keepers, craftsmen and the like. They kept to themselves to a great degree and were seen as foreign to a large number of the German people. Many Germans considered them to be little more than alien exploiters who stole from the people and kept them down…
Now remember that after World War 1 Germany got hit with pretty tough sanctions and reparations to pay. Inflation shot up, prices went up and who would be seen to profit from this by the average man in the street? I think the answer is obvious. The outsider, the shopkeeper, the ones who charged these prices and who seemed to be profiting from them
You had a pretty good parallel in Los Angeles during the recent, well not so recent riots. Who were the ones that to a great degree got targeted for looting and destruction?. Store owners and shopkeepers who were in large part immigrants, considered to be outsiders exploiting the people. People who kept to themselves by and large.
No, Hitlers actions were well calculated and had little if anything to do with the Passion of Christ, as popular as it may be to believe that. He saw an opportunity to unite the people against a common enemy, the perceived outsiders, exploiters and aliens in their midst who were profiting from the German peoples misery.
It worked against them for that reason. Thats not to say that some may have felt that the policies against the Jews were some sort of divine retribution against them, but the reason behind the persecutions had nothing to do with the Passion and everything to do with the practical need for a popular scapegoat in order for control to be seized.
You know about Krystalnacht, about the Warsaw Ghetto, about the Shoah (Holocaust) and you argue this was just a politically-motivated case of resentment being stirred up against what was seen as an unfeeling “big business” class, and had nothing to do with anti-Semitism? The synagogues were torched and everyone from old women to little children were rounded up for a life of inhuman privations, purely out of economic frustration? You can compare this to a mob looting stores? (Which, I might add, clearly had racial motivations, as well, and not purely economic ones.) Put “Shoah” or “Holocaust” and “photos” into Google, and I think you’ll have to change your tune. Hitler’s “Final Solution” was not merely a political expediency that happened to fall upon the Jews. He hated a lot of people, but he undeniably put the Jews in a class by themselves.
This has nothing to do with the Passion, but everything to do with how a considerable number Christians through the ages have seen fit to twist the message of the Passion against Jews. Look up the history of the passion plays, which the Church has found necessary to ban at times (and we’re talking 1770, not Vatican II). Said a villager and performer from present-day Oberammergau: “Former Passion plays, especially those from the medieval time, treated the conflict of Jews and Christians in a very dangerous way. The idea that the Jews are morally and intellectually inferior to Christians used to be very clear in the play, but that’s not the message that we will give to our audience.”
This is what Hitler had to say to the crowds at the passion plays of Oberammergau in 1934: He said: "his blood be on us and our children… [Matt 27:25], maybe I’m the one who must execute this curse… I do no more than join what has been done for more than 1,500 years already. Maybe I render Christianity the best service ever!”
You can know this and still argue that a Jew is supposed to think no harm can come from an observance surrounding the Passion?
- There is no question that Passion plays historically were used to whip up antisemitism.
- You can’t preach that Jews killed God and continue to bear the guilt of deicide and not expect there to devlope a culture of hate against Jews.
That was an effect that they too often had, and it was sometimes intentional. It is incorrect to say that this was the primary goal for which passion plays were invented.
A person can preach that we were all responsible for the crucifixion, and yet not preach self-hatred. It is the singling out of *someone else *at whose feet to lay responsibility for the Passion that was the root of this evil. A passion play can be done without that, and still be within its original roots, and in fact must be done without that in order to be faithful to the Gospel.
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At any rate, there is a Jewish perception that our observance of the Pascal Mysteries could be used to pose a danger to them again someday. Their reasons, if not currently applicable, are nevertheless not imaginary. I don’t think that the proper response to their concerns is to downplay the evil that has been visited upon them in the past, let alone to ridicule them for being concerned. After all, if those who deny history are doomed to repeat it, who will suffer the broken windows? Whose families will be terrified, or even killed? On top of that, if we so callously deny their concerns, what kind of evangelization is that? We might as well save our breath.