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The Relationship Between the United Church of Christ
and the Jewish Community [ro35uccj.v2]
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND AND THEOLOGICAL RATIONALE:
Christianity, developing its faith and identity, its life, and its
creativity from a common heritage with Judaism, has a unique
relationship to the Jewish people. the New Testament can only be
adequately understood in the light of this common heritage with the
Jewish people. The New Testament testifies to how painful was the
historical process of separation of the Christian community from the
Jewish people.
We in the United Church of Christ acknowledge that the Christian
Church has, throughout most of its history, denied God's continuing
covenantal relationship with the Jewish people expressed in the faith of
Judaism. This denial has often led to outright rejection of the Jewish
people and to theologically and humanly intolerable violence. The
Church's frequent portrayal of the Jews as blind, recalcitrant, evil,
and rejected by God has found expression in much Christian theology,
liturgy, and education. Such a negative portrayal of the Jewish people
and of Judaism has been a factor in the shaping of anti-Jewish attitudes
of societies and the policies of governments. The most devastating
lethal metastasis of this process occurred in our own country during the
Holocaust.
SUMMARY:
Faced with this history from which we as Christians cannot, and must
not, disassociate ourselves, we ask for God's forgiveness through our
Lord Jesus Christ. We pray for divine grace that will enable us, more
firmly than ever before, to turn from this path of rejection and
persecution to affirm that Judaism has not been superseded by
Christianity; that Christianity is not to be understood as the successor
religion to Judaism; God's covenant with the Jewish people has never
been abrogated. God has not rejected the Jewish people; God is faithful
in keeping covenant.
RESOLUTIONS:
WHEREAS, the God we worship is the God of all creation; and
WHEREAS, the Christian communities of recent times have come more and
more to recognize that God's covenant with the Jewish people stands
inviolate (Rom. 9-11); and
WHEREAS, the Christian Church also stands bound to the same God in
covenant, the covenant affirmed and embodied in Jesus as the Christ, and
WHEREAS, the Christian Church has denied for too long the continuing
validity of God's covenant with the Jewish people, with all the
attending evils that have followed upon such denial;
THEREFORE, the Sixteenth General Synod of the United Church if Christ
affirms its recognition that God's covenant with the Jewish people has
not been rescinded or abrogated by God, but remains in full force,
inasmuch as "the gifts and the promise of God are irrevocable"
(Rom. 11:29).
FURTHER, the Sixteenth General Synod of the United Church of Christ
expresses its determination to seek out and to affirm the consequences
of this understanding of the continuing divine covenant with the Jewish
people in the Church's theological statements, its liturgical practices,
its hymnody, its educational work, and its witness before the world.
1. Calls upon all boards and instrumentalities responsible for the
development of our educational materials to:
Examine and evaluate the image of Jews and Judaism presented in
curriculum for use in local churches, seminary Church History courses,
and other literature which is used to promote greater understanding of
our tradition throughout the United Church of Christ, and:
On the basis of the evaluation to develop guidelines and educational
resources for suggested use in the local church and seminaries to enable
the literature to be representative of the understanding of Judaism and
the Jewish people as a continuing witness in Covenant to God's presence
in the world.
2. Calls upon those boards, offices and instrumentalities responsible
for the development of literature relating to worship in the United
Church of Christ to examine the liturgical materials, and based on this
evaluation to create guidelines which will reflect a sensitivity to the
image of Jews and Judaism which is projected in our liturgical content.
3. Calls upon the Office for Church in Society to coordinate the work
of the established Inter-agency Task Force on Jewish-Christian
Relations, the Jewish-Christian Dialogue Project in the United Church of
Christ and other groups within the United Church of Christ locally and
regionally, and nationally who are presently engaged in dialogue with
the Jewish community.
4. Calls upon all local congregations, and regional judicatories of
the United Church of Christ actively to engage in dialogue with the
Jewish community in order to establish relationships of trust and to
participate in a joint witness against all injustice in our local
communities and in the world.
General Synod XVI
June 30, 1987
Cleveland, Ohio |