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Judaism and the
Church:
before and after Vatican II |
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1-11-2013
By
John Vennari
It is true
that Pope Benedict has done some real good for the Church, the most
obvious example being his efforts to restore legal status to the
Tridentine Mass. Unfortunately, he continues to follow in the
misguided footsteps of his post-Conciilar predecessor in implementing
and expanding the new orientations of Vatican II.
This is
especially apparent in Pope Benedict’s dealing with modern Judaism,
which is based on the Council’s teaching on the Jews found in the
document Nostra Aetate. This new orientation has almost nothing
in common with the 2000-year Tradition of the Church. |
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Cardinal
Kurt Koch,
President of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian
Unity,
delivered a
speech on May 16 at the Angelicum in Rome where he applauded Pope
Benedict’s dedication to Nostra Aetate and its subsequent
developments. |

Cardinal
Kurt Koch |
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Koch praised
Cardinal Ratzinger for “groundbreaking articles” in the area of
Catholic-Jewish relations, he went on to celebrate Pope Benedict as a
man committed to the Second Vatican Council’s new approach, and lauded
Benedict for following in the exact footsteps of Pope John Paul II:
Pope Benedict
XVI carries on and progresses the conciliatory work of his
predecessor with regard to Jewish-Catholic conversation. He not only
addressed the first letter in his pontificate to the Chief Rabbi in
Rome but also gave an assurance at his first encounter with a Jewish
delegation June 9, 2005 that the Church was moving firmly on the
fundamental principles of [Vatican II’s] Nostra Aetate and he
intended to continue the dialogue in the footsteps of his [post-Conciliar]
predecessors. In reviewing the seven years of his pontificate we
find that he has in this short space of time taken all those steps
which Pope John Paul took in his 27-year pontificate: Pope
Benedict XVI visited the former concentration camp Auschwitz–Birkenau
on May 28, 2006; during his visit to Israel in May 2009 he too stood
before the Wailing Wall, he met with the Chief Rabbinate of
Jerusalem and prayed for the victims of the Shoah in Yad Vashem; and
on January 17, 2010 he was warmly received by the Jewish community
in Rome in their synagogue. His first visit to a synagogue was of
course made already on August 19, 2005 in Cologne on the occasion of
World Youth Day, and on April 18. 2008 he visited the Park East
Synagogue in New York. So we can claim with gratitude that no
other Pope in history has visited as many synagogues as Benedict
XVI.[1]
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Likewise, when Pope Benedict visited the synagogue
in Rome,
Rabbi David
Rosen, director of the American Jewish Committee’s Interreligious
Affairs was ecstatic, and understood better than many Catholics
the true revolutionary nature of such acts.
“With
the visit to the synagogue Pope Benedict is institutionalizing
revolutions,” said Rabbi Rosen. “By visiting the Roman
synagogue, Pope Benedict is making it difficult for a subsequent
Pope not to pay such a visit. John Paul’s [1986] visit
could have been a one-off, but now with Benedict XVI’s visit,
there is a sense of continuity.”[2] |

Pope
Benedict XVI at a synagogue |
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Pope John Paul
II visited one synagogue during his 26 year reign. In the short
span of six years, Pope Benedict has already visited three.
In Pope
Benedict’s actions in this regard, we see the revolutionary Council
document Nostra Aetate at work. Our highest churchmen
continually acclaim Nostra Aetate not as a reaffirmation of
Tradition, but as a brand new direction.
“A Fundamental
Re-Orientation”
Cardinal Koch,
today’s head of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity –
hand-picked by Benedict XVI for that prestigious Vatican post –
celebrates Nostra Aetata as the “crucial compass” of all
endeavors towards Catholic-Jewish dialogue. In his May 16 speech, Koch
refers to it as the “foundation document,” the Magna Carta
of dialogue between the Roman Catholic Church and Judaism. He calls
Nostra Aetate a text that effected “a fundamental
re-orientation of the Catholic Church” following the
Council.[3]
Nostra Aetate
was
designed to be only the beginning of something much bigger. It is the
culmination of more than two decades of work by modernist-leaning
theologians who were determined to side-step traditional theology and
establish a new basis of relations between Catholics and Jews.[4]
The key text
of Nostra Aetate on this point is in the document’s fourth
chapter:
Given this
great spiritual heritage common to Christians and Jews, it is the
wish of this sacred Council to foster and recommend a mutual
knowledge and esteem… the Jews should not be presented as rejected
by God or accursed, as though this follows from Scripture… The
Church… deplores all hatred, persecution and other manifestations of
anti-semitism, whatever the period and whoever was responsible.
Of course, no
Catholic may favor the mistreatment of Jews or of anyone else. This is
a given. What’s troubling, however, is the ambiguity contained in the
phrase, “The Jews should not be presented as rejected by God or
accursed, as though this follows from Scripture.”
This phrase
lacks necessary distinctions. |
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Firstly, all
of us are members of an “accursed race” – the human race.
None of us are born Catholic, but enter this world stained with
original sin as children of Adam and Eve. We are thus born, as
Blessed Abbot Marmion explains, “enemies of God.” [5] The Psalms
teach, “Indeed
in guilt was I born and in sin my mother conceived me.” (Psalm
5:7) St.
Paul affirms,
“For we are by nature children of wrath.” (Eph. 2:3).
We are all born as part of the Kingdom of Satan.
To be freed
from this kingdom, we need to be “saved”. The eminent Msgr. Joseph
Clifford Fenton explains, the process of salvation requires a
transfer from the Kingdom of Satan to the Kingdom of God. This
Kingdom of God, according to the age-old doctrine of the Two
Kingdoms,[6] is the Catholic Church, the one and only supernatural
society established by Christ in which salvation can be found. |

Bl. Columba Marmion
(1858-1923) |
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The process of
salvation, as Fenton notes, is similar to being saved from a
sinking rowboat wherein the individual is sure to perish, and being
transferred to a sea-worthy ocean liner. This necessary
transfer from the Kingdom of Satan to the Kingdom of God requires
Baptism and acceptance of the Jesus Christ and his Divine Revelation.
“He who believes and is baptized will be saved. He who does not
believe will be condemned.” (Mark 16:6) This teaching applies to
all people on earth, whether they be Jewish, Muslim, Hindu or secular
humanist.
We are all thus
born as part of an “accursed race.” The only way to free
ourselves from this curse, the only way out of the kingdom of Satan,
is to leave the devil’s empire and transfer into Christ’s one
true Church, and to keep oneself in the state of grace by means of
prayer and the sacraments.
“Has Made
Obsolete the Former One”
Next, Nostra
Aetate fails to make a crucial distinction between Jews as
individuals and the Jewish religion. True, Jews are not
under a curse that precludes their salvation, since our sacred history
is rife with Jewish converts who left the religion of the synagogue
and embraced the Catholic Church.
What is today
called the Jewish religion, however, is not of God, since it is based
on a rejection of the Messiah. Our Lord warned the Jews of His day, “Therefore
I say to you, that the Kingdom of God will be taken away from you and
will be given to a people yielding its fruits.” (Matt: 21: 43)
Likewise St. Paul writes that Christ’s New Covenant
“has made obsolete the former one.” (Heb. 8:13) |
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Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton,
reaffirming the infallible and unchanging doctrine of two
millennia, explains that the older social unity – the Jewish
religion of the Old Covenant – had been the ecclesia of
God, but it “lost its status as the ecclesia or the
kingdom of God on earth” because of its formal rejection of
the Messiah. Our Lord Jesus Christ superseded the Old Covenant
with His New Covenant by His Passion and Death on the Cross and
the establishment of His Church. “This new organization as the
faithful remnant of Israel,” writes Fenton, “went on to be the
ecclesia in a much more complete and perfect sense than the
other had been.” |

Msgr. Joseph C. Fenton
(1906-1969) |
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“Thus,”
Fenton expounds, “the society over which the Roman Pontiff presides
is called the Church not simply by reason of the fact that it is a
religious community or organization, but actually and ultimately
because this society is the kingdom of God on earth, the assembly of
the people of the divine covenant, the social unit apart from which
there is no salvation.”[7]These crucial distinctions are not found
in Nostra Aetate’s ambiguities. It is yet another example of
Vatican II as essentially flawed documents. The
deliberate ambiguities[8] and crucial omissions in the text open the
door to a new theology unheard of in Church history. This new
interpretation has become the “official interpretation” of the Council
by the post-Conciliar Vatican.
Nostra Aetate
speaks of the “spiritual bonds linking” Jews and Christians and
of the “great spiritual patrimony” common to both. This new
approach no longer speaks of the infidelity of Israel, but of
its fidelity.[9] The Jewish writer Lazare Landau rejoiced that
thanks to Vatican II, “the Church’s doctrine has indeed
undergone a total change.”[10]
The fact that Nostra Aetate is a revolutionary text out of step
with 2000 years of Catholic teaching is celebrated, as already noted,
by Cardinal Koch himself. He calls the teaching of Nostra Aetate,
the “crucial compass” that effected “a
fundamental re-orientation of the Catholic Church”
after the Council.
This new
orientation defies the nature of objective truth itself. It also
defies the de fide teaching of the First Vatican Council, as
well as the Oath Against Modernism, both of which bind Catholics to
adhere to sacred doctrine “in the same meaning and in the same
explanation” as what the Church always held. The new orientation
of Nostra Aetate is a striking instance of Modernism in action.
Making Explicit what was Implicit |
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Upon John
Paul II’s elevation to the Papacy, he said one of his primary
duties as Pope was to make explicit what was implicit
in the Council.[11] This is was what motivated his ecumenical
actions, his pan-religious Assisi meetings and other revolutionary
programs. Likewise his entire approach to Judaism, including his
being the first Pope to visit a synagogue, was part of making
explicit what was implicit in Vatican II. |

Pope John
Paul II at the Assisi
inter-religious meeting of 1986 |
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On March 6,
1982, Pope John Paul II declared in a speech regarding Jewish Catholic
relations:
Our common
spiritual inheritance is particularly significant at the level of
our faith in a single God, one, good and merciful, who loves men and
leads them to love Him, the master of history and of the destiny of
mankind, who is our Father and who chose Israel, the cultivated
olive-tree onto which has been grafted the wild-olive branch of the
gentiles.
Pope John Paul
II also spoke of a joint undertaking with the Jews as “a close
collaboration to which we are called by our common heritage, namely
the service of man.”[12]
Jean Madiran,
the renowned Catholic writer in France, succinctly explains the
novelty in John Paul’s words: “We have two new ideas”, writes
Madiran, the notion that Jews and Catholics worship “the same God”,
and a call for Jews and Catholics to work “in close collaboration,
two ideas which seem to derive from the logic of the Council … though
the Council text did not go so far as spelling them out so clearly.”[13]
Under John
Paul’s pontificate, the post-Conciliar Church’s new attitude toward
the Jews was made even more explicit in the 1985 Notes for a
Correct
Presentation of
Jews and Judaism in the preaching and Catechesis of the Catholic
Church,”
issued by the Vatican Commission for Religious Relations with the Jews.
This Vatican document was approved by John Paul II who “ratified
it as being in line with own thinking…”[14]
The Vatican text
reads:
Attentive to
the same God who has spoken, hanging on the same word, we have to
witness to one same memory and one common hope in Him who is the
master of history. We must also accept our responsibility to
prepare the
world for the
coming of the Messiah by working together for social justice,
respect for the rights of
persons and nations and for social and international reconciliation…
To this we are
driven, Jews and Christians, by the command to love our neighbor, by
a common hope for the Kingdom of God and by the great heritage of
the Prophets. Transmitted soon enough by catechesis, such a
conception would teach young Christians in a practical way to
cooperate with Jews, going beyond simple dialogue.[15]
Thus in this
1985 document, the Vatican – with Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger as Head of
the CDF – is officially inviting Catholics to cooperate with Jews to
prepare for the coming of the Messiah.
Again, Madiran
notes: |
This idea,
totally alien to Catholicism, is a traditional concept of Jewish
theology in its view of the role of “the religions derived
from Judaism.” One official indication of this is the
declaration made by the Grand Rabbinate of France on April 16,
1973, in which it is recalled “the teaching of the greatest
Jewish theologians, for whom the mission of the religion derived
from Judaism [Catholicism being one of them – Ed.]
is to prepare humanity for the advent of the messianic era
announced by the Bible.” In its directives of May/June
1985 Rome has thus allotted to Catholicism the place and the
role assigned to it by Jewish theology.[16]
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Jean Madiran on the
cover
of his recent book |
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It is worth
pausing to consider a recent statement from SSPX Bishop Tissier de
Mallerais in this regard. In a speech in France this past September,
he affirmed that Pope Benedict insisted in a June 30, 2012,
hand-written letter to Bishop Fellay, “I confirm to you in fact
[that], in order [for you] to be truly ‘reintegrated’ into
the Church, it is necessary to truly accept the Second Vatican Council
and the post-conciliar Magisterium.”[17]
The entire new
orientation toward the Jews is an inescapable component of the “post-conciliar
magisterium” that the SSPX is expected to accept, including the
Vatican initiative of Catholics and Jews working together “to
prepare the
world for the
coming of the Messiah by working together for social justice, respect
for the rights of
persons and nations and for social and international
reconciliation...”
Further,
according to the same 1985 Vatican document, this initiative should be
transmitted “by
catechesis,”
in order to “teach young Christians in
a practical way to cooperate with Jews, going beyond simple dialogue.”
It is not
unthinkable that the post-conciliar hierarchy would eventually try to
impose such a curriculum on the youngsters in St. Mary’s, Post Falls,
Massena and even Winona; which is one of the many reasons SSPX
leadership could not at this time make an Agreement with today’s Rome.
Committed to the New
Direction
Throughout his
writings over the years on the subject of Catholic-Jewish relations,
Pope Benedict has neglected to emphasize the duty of Catholics to work
and pray for the conversion of the Jews to the Catholic Faith.
Instead, his consistent thrust has been to teach that Jews and
Christians should be a “common witness” to the one God.
These themes are
found in his books: Many Religions, One Covenant; God and
the World; Jesus of Nazareth Part II; and Light of the
World. I detailed this extensively in my April 2011 article:
“Common Mission and Significant Silence,” and will not repeat it all
here, but will review some of the most striking points. |
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Pope
Benedict XVI in his book Jesus of Nazareth, Part II quotes
St. Bernard of Clairvaux who says that for the Jews “a
determined point in time has been fixed, which cannot be
anticipated.
The full
number of the Gentiles must come in first…”.[18]
These words
are employed to give the impression that the Catholic Church
should not try to convert Jews to the one true Faith, since there
is a prophecy they will convert toward the end of time anyway.
[19]
Unfortunately, Pope Benedict does not mention the full quote of
St. Bernard that rounds out Catholic doctrine on this point. In
union with the perennial doctrine of the Church, St. Bernard
teaches, “We
are told by the Apostle that when the time is ripe all Israel
shall be saved. But those who die beforehand
[that is, those who do not convert] will remain in death.”[20] |

St. Bernard
of Clairvaux |
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The complete
quote from St. Bernard runs dead against Vatican II’s new orientation,
so it is not mentioned. Pope Benedict here is showing himself to be
primarily an ecumenical theologian rather than a truly Catholic
one. As far back as 1962, the brilliant Greymoor theologian Fr. Edward
Hanahoe warned that a tactic of ecumenical theologians is to pass over
in “significant silence” any Catholic truth that opposes their
ecumenical framework.[21]
Likewise, in the
early 1960s, the Protestant Dr. Visser’t Hooft admitted, “the
simple ABC’s of ecumenism” is that “there is no
ecumenical language which is completely unambiguous.”[22]
There will always be un-clarity. There will always be elements missing
that should be there. This is the nature of modern ecumenism and its
ecumenical theologians, of which Joseph Ratzinger is one. Nothing is
gained by pretending otherwise.
In his 1998 book
Many Religions, One Covenant, then-Cardinal Ratzinger laid out
a central theme of his theology: that Jews and Christians worship the
same God, and the implication that Catholics should not try to convert
Jews to the one true Faith. Cardinal Ratzinger writes:
Jews and
Christians should accept each other in profound inner reconciliation,
neither in disregard of their faith nor in denying it, but out of the
depth of faith itself. In their mutual reconciliation, they should
become a force for peace in and for the world. Through their
witness to the one God, who cannot be adored apart from the unity of
love of God and neither in disregard of their faith, nor in denying
it, but out of the depth of faith itself. In their mutual
recognition, they should become a force for peace in and for the
world…, they should open the door into the world for this God so
that His will may be done…[23]
By all
appearances, we cannot help but conclude that Benedict sees Jews and
Christians having a “common mission” to bring God to mankind and peace
to the world. We never see any mention of the need of Jews to convert
to the Church for salvation. Rather, we are left to draw the opposite
conclusion. |
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It is
certainly difficult to reconcile Cardinal Ratzinger’s words to the
teaching of Pope Pius VII, who in his Encyclical Letter Post
tam diuturnas, denounced indifferentism and the new concept of
religious liberty:
By the
fact that the indiscriminate freedom of all forms of worship is
proclaimed, truth is confused with error, and the Holy and
Immaculate Spouse of Christ is placed on the same level as
heretical sects and even as Jewish faithlessness.[24]
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Pope Pius VII |
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For what did Our
Lord say to the Jews who do not accept Him?
You are from
beneath, I am from above. You are of this world, I am not of this
world. Therefore I said to you, that you shall die in your sin. For
if you do not believe that I am He [the Son of God], you will die in
your sin. (John 8:23-24)
Contrariwise,
the new post-Conciliar program effectively says, “If you do not
believe that I am He, you are still faithful to the Covenant in your
own way.” This new approach is the polar opposite of the words of
Christ Himself.
When Pope
Benedict visited the Rome synagogue in 2010 he reiterated the same
theme found in his books.
Pope Benedict
said:
Christians and
Jews share to a great extent a common spiritual patrimony, they
pray to the same Lord,[25] they have the same roots, and yet
they often remain unknown to each other. It is our duty, in response
to God’s call, to strive to keep open the space for dialogue, for
reciprocal respect, for growth in friendship, for a common
witness in the face of the challenges of our time, which invite
us to cooperate for the good of humanity in this world created by
God, the Omnipotent and Merciful.[26]
Yet we know that
Jews and Christians do not worship the same God. Jews reject the
Trinitarian God. They reject Jesus Christ as Lord and Messiah. It is
St. John, the Apostle of Love, who writes: “He who honoreth not
the Son, honoreth not the Father, who hath sent Him.” (John 5:23)
Finally, as
noted, the new approach to be a “common witness” to God along with
Jews implicitly demands we no longer speak of the need for their
conversion to Christ’s one true Church for salvation. It effectively
tells Jews they have the moral freedom to live their lives as if Jesus
Christ were a fraud and imposter.
In fact,
Cardinal Koch briefly mentions the sticky problem of Jews not
accepting Christ, but deals with it in manner that defies reason. Koch
says in his May 16 speech, “That
the Jews are participants in God’s salvation is theologically
unquestionable, but how that can be possible without confessing Christ
explicitly, is and remains an unfathomable divine mystery.”[27]
Is it possible
for a cardinal’s statement to be any more insipid? The truth is: our
post-Conciliar churchmen have mangled traditional Catholic doctrine,
and constructed a false theology to serve the new god of
“Jewish-Catholic relations”. These churchmen have adopted
contradictions and impossible conundrums, and then try to camouflage
the disaster by wrapping it in a pious shroud of “unfathomable divine
mystery.”
Vatican II’s “fundamental
reorientation of the Catholic Church” is a manifestation of the
components of liberal Catholicism: especially “religious
indifferentism” and the modernist belief in at least “some
transformation of the Church’s dogmatic message over the course of the
centuries.”[28]
In following the
post-Conciliar approach to the Jews, Pope Benedict, in the words of
Rabbi Rosen, is “institutionalizing revolution” – a revolution
that is a head-on collision with the infallible decree of the Council
of Florence that “Pagans, Jews, heretics and schismatics” are “outside
the Catholic Church,” and as such, “can never be partakers of
eternal life,” unless “before death” they are joined to the
one true Church of Jesus Christ, the Catholic Church.
Koch and
“Anti-Semitism”
Within the past two months, Cardinal Koch once again
reaffirmed the centrality of Nostra Aetate in a speech to
members of the Vatican’s Pontifical Commission for Religious Relations
with Jews, published in the L’Osservatore Romano, November 7.
The effort to reach an Accord with the SSPX, Koch
told the Commission, “absolutely does not mean” that the
Catholic Church will accept or support the anti-Jewish or anti-Semitic
positions allegedly espoused by some SSPX members.
“The Holy Father has charged me,” said Koch,
“with presenting the question in the correct way. Nostra Aetate
is not being questioned in any way by the magisterium of the Church as
the pope himself has demonstrated repeatedly in his speeches, his
writings and his personal gestures regarding Judaism.”[29]
The pro-abortion Anti-Defamation League was quick to
praise Koch’s remarks. “…we applaud and welcome Cardinal Koch’s
strong and clear re-affirmation of the significance of Nostra
Aetate for the Catholic Church,” said Abraham Foxman, ADL
National Director.
The ADL press-release lauded Koch’s reaffirmation of
Nostra Aetate as “the crucial compass of all endeavors
toward Jewish-Catholic dialogue.”
The same press-release quoted Rabbi Eric J.
Greenberg, ADL Interfaith Director, saying that the ADL:
respectfully
urges that any potential rehabilitation of the SSPX include the
requirement that the Society publicly reject their decades of
hatred [sic], and that as an expression of their affirmation
of Nostra Aetate, be required to remove all anti-Semitic
rhetoric from both their online and their print publications.[30]
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We cannot too quickly wilt before the charge of
“anti-semitism” or “anti-Judaism” until we know exactly how these
potboiler terms are defined. Keep in mind this same ADL, in line
with Jewish historian Jules Isaac, consider St. Thomas Aquinas,
St. John Chrysostom, the Saints, Popes and Fathers of the Church,
and the Holy Gospel writers themselves as “anti-Semitic”.[31] |

The Four Evangelists |
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On June 8, 1999, I attended an evening of
Jewish-Catholic dialogue at a local Catholic seminary. The two
speakers conducting the workshop were Professor James McManus of the
United States Bishops Conference and Rabbi Leon Klenicki of the
Anti-Defamation League of the B’Nai B’rith.[32]
Rabbi Klenicki claimed that the churchmen of the
early centuries (those whom we revere as Fathers of the Church:
Augustine, Ambrose, Cyprian, etc.) were operating with a highly
imperfect view of what was going on at the time of Our Lord. He even
claimed that Pilate was solely responsible for the death of Christ,
and that the Pharisees were actually trying to warn Jesus against
Pilate’s treachery.
In other words, Klenicki propounded the false notion
that the Gospel accounts of the events leading up to the Passion and
Death of Our Lord are not trustworthy, which can only mean the Gospels
are not truly the Word of God.
Traditional Catholic doctrine, Klenicki told us, was
poisoned by alleged “triumphalism” and “anti-Judaism”
that manifested itself in the so-called “teaching of contempt”
of the Catholic Church in the Medieval ages. This so-called “teaching
of contempt,” however, was nothing more than the traditional
doctrine of the Church, based on Holy Scripture, that Our Lord brought
an end to the Old Covenant by His Passion and Death on the Cross, and
by establishing the Catholic Church as the New Covenant.
When we fully realize the disdain some of these
powerful Jewish groups hold against Christ, His Gospel and His Church,
and when we better appreciate the damage to Catholic doctrine done by
Nostra Aetate, we can only tremble when we read the
Anti-Defamation League’s Abraham Foxman praise of Pope Benedict for “dedicating
himself to the full implementation of this document [Nostra
Aetate], and his genuine and sincere commitment to
Catholic-Jewish relations.”[33]
Treating all men, Catholic or not, with love and
respect is required by both natural and Divine Law. It is the natural
result of the soul who truly loves Christ and patterns his actions on
the Divine Model.
Likewise, peaceful relations with non-Catholic
religions are legitimate. But reorienting our sacred doctrine to
please non-Catholic religions, as was effected by Vatican II, is
criminal. Working toward this reorientation of doctrine is,
objectively speaking, a sin against Faith itself. For those ordained
prior to 1967, the sin is compounded by the breaking of the solemn
Oath Against Modernism they swore to God, with one hand on the Bible,
on the eve of their ordination.[34]
While the faithful can in no way judge the
subjective intentions of the Pope (e.g., we do not know how much he fully understand the objectively sinful nature of his
ecumenical actions), it must be realized that Catholics are in no way
bound to accept these novel teachings even if they come from a
Pontiff. We recall the instruction given by Pope Innocent III who
taught that if a Pope departs from the universal teaching and customs
of the Church, “he need not be followed” in this regard.[35] In
fact, as St. Robert Bellarmine teaches, we have the duty to
resist.[36]
The Fatima Message exhorts us to
“pray
a great deal for the Holy Father.” May Our Lord
soon send us a Pontiff who will once again be faithful to the
admonition in Vatican I and in the Oath Against Modernism to teach and
preserve the Faith “in the same meaning and in the same explanation”
as the Church always taught throughout the centuries. |
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Footnotes
1. “Building on Nostra Aetate - 50 Years of
Christian-Jewish Dialogue,” Cardinal Kurt Koch, Lecture at the
Pontifical University of St Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum), John
Paul II Center, Rome, May 16, 2012. Published by the Council of
Centers of Jewish-Catholic Relations (emphasis added).
2.
From “Pope
to Make Symbolic Visit to Rome Synagogue this Sunday,”
Catholic Herald, January 15, 2010 (emphasis added).
4. See From Enemy to Brother: The Revolution in
Catholic Teaching on the Jews, 1933-1965 by Professor John
Connelly. (Harvard University Press, 2012). The book’s author is
clearly in sympathy with the progressivists, but this does not
detract from the value of the documentation. This newly
published book documents the work of progressivist pre-Vatican
II theologians to construct a new theology to accommodate modern
Jewish-Catholic relations. It is the work of these theologians,
primarily that of Karl Theime, who laid the groundwork for
Nostra Aetate’s new approach. We hope to detail more of this
material in a future issue of CFN.
6. “The race of man after its miserable fall from
God, the Creator and the Giver of Heavenly gifts, ‘through the
envy of the devil,’ separated into two diverse parts,
of which the one steadfastly contends for truth and virtue, the
other for those things which are contrary to virtue and to
truth. The one is the Kingdom of God on
earth, the true Church of Jesus Christ;
and those who desire from their heart to be united with it so as
to gain salvation must of necessity serve God and His
only-begotten Son with their whole mind and with an entire will.
The other is the kingdom of Satan,
in whose possession and control are all whosoever follow the
fatal example of their leader and of our first parents, those
who refuse to obey the divine and eternal law, and who have many
aims of their own in contempt of God, and many aims also against
God. This twofold kingdom St. Augustine keenly discerned and
described after the manner of two cities, contrary in their laws
because striving for contrary objects; and with subtle brevity
he expressed the efficient cause of each in these words: ‘Two
loves formed two cities: the love of self, reaching even to
contempt of God, an earthly city; and the love of God, reaching
even to contempt of self, a Heavenly one.’ At every period of
time each has been in conflict with the other ...” Emphasis
added. Quotation taken from Msgr. Fenton The Catholic
Church and Salvation, p. 135. Yet as Michael Davies explains
in Pope John’s Council, Vatican II, especially the
Council document Gaudium et spes, effectively abandoned
the doctrine of the Two Kingdoms. Davies writes, “Gaudium et
spes is pervaded by the notion that all men are basically
men of good will, seeking the truth and anxious to do good. Far
from the notion of conflict between the City of God and the City
of Man [as set forth, as we have just seen, in the writings of
St. Augustine and Pope Leo XIII – Humanum Genus], the
Council Document Gaudium et spes envisages a future where
the two cities work together for the common good of mankind.”
Pope John’s Council, pp. 184-85.
9. Quoted form
“Rome’s Secret Accord with Jewish Leaders”, Jean Madiran,
Originally published in the Autumn 1990 issue of Madiran’s
French journal Itineraires, published in English by
Anthony Fraser’s Apropos, Supplement to Apropos No. 9
(not dated), pp. 4-6. Emphasis added. See “Common Mission and
Significant Silence,” (CFN, April 2011) for a summary of
the Madiran report
10. Ibid.
11. In his first Papal address, John Paul II did not
speak of his duty to preserve the purity of Catholic doctrine
against the many errors of the day, as did Pope St. Pius X.
Rather, John Paul II saw his primary task to further the progressivist agenda of Vatican II. On October 17, 1978, the
newly- elected John Paul II said: “We consider it our primary
duty to be that of promoting, with prudent but encouraging
action, the most exact fulfillment of the norms and directives
of the Council. Above all we must favor the development of
Conciliar attitudes. First one must be in harmony with the
Council. One must put into effect what was started in its
documents; and what was ‘implicit’ should be made explicit
in the light of the experiments that followed and in the
light of new and emerging circumstances.” Quoted from Petter
Hebblethwaite, “Pope John Paul II,” in Adrian Hasting, Modern
Catholicism: Vatican II and After (London: Oxford University
Pres, 1991), p. 447 Emphasis added.
17. Posted on CFN webpage, September 27, 2012.
See www.cfnews.org/tiss-sept27.htm
18.
Jesus of Nazareth Part II: Holy Week: From the Entrance into
Jerusalem to the Resurrection, Pope Benedict XVI, [San
Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2011], pp.
44-45.
Emphasis added.
19.
The
progressivist theologian Karl Theime, whom Professor John
Connelly calls a pioneer in modern Jewish-Catholic relations,
propounded a similar theme prior to Vatican II. “Theime noted
that Paul had indeed prophesied that ‘All Israel will be
saved,’” but only after the ‘full number’ of Gentiles had come
into the Messianic Kingdom. If the salvation of Israel was
certain, then missionary activities should focus on those whose
salvation was not certain. This new reading had already become
popular in the emerging Christian-Jewish dialogue in France,
where Jules Isaac was arguing that the meaning of mission had to
shift in a post-Holocaust world.” From Enemy to Brother,
p. 203. Young Father Joseph Ratzinger was a correspondent with
Karl Theime. More on this large topic in future issues of CFN.
20.
“Letter to
England to Summon the Second Crusade, 1146”. From Bruno Scott
James, trans., The Letters of St. Bernard of Clairvaux
(London: Burns Oates, 1953). From the webpage: Council of
Centers on Jewish-Catholic Relations
21.
Quoted in
Hanahoe, “Ecumenism and Ecclesiology, Part II, by Father Edward
Hanahoe, American Ecclesiastical Review, November, 1962.
22. "Unity:
Special Problems, Dogmatic and Moral", Father David Greenstock,
The Thomist, 1963. Cited in article as from The
Ecumenical Review, VIII, January, 1956.
23. Many
Religions – One Covenant, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, [San
Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1998], p. 45-46.
24. Pope
Pius VII, Letter, Post tam diurturnas, quoted from The
Kingship of Christ and Organized Naturalism, Father Denis
Fahey,
[Originally published in 1943. Republished by Christian Book
Club of America, Palmdale, CA, 1987]
p. 10. Quote also found in The Kingship of Christ and the
Conversion of the Jewish Nation, p. 12
25.
Speaking on the modernist notion that various religions worship
the same God, the eminent theologian Father Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange
explained that such a tenet denies the principle of
non-contradiction, which is the most fundamental principle of
reason. Father Garrigou-Lagrange explains, “It is injurious to
say that God would consider with equanimity all religions while
one teaches truth and one teachers error, when one promises the
good and one promises the evil. To say this would be to affirm
that God would be indifferent to good and evil, to what is
honest and shameful.” De Revelatione, Father Garrigou-Lagrange,
[Paris: Galbalda, 1921], Tome 2, Quoted from “Christians,
Muslims and Jews: Do we all Have the Same God?”, Father François
Knittel, Christendom, November, December, 2007.
26. “Papal
Address at Synagogue in Rome: ‘May These Wounds Be Healed
Forever’”, Pope Benedict XVI, Zenit, Jan. 17, 2010.
27.
Koch:
“Building on Nostra Aetate”.
28.
See “The
Components of Liberal Catholicism,” Msgr. Joseph Clifford
Fenton, American Ecclesiastical Review, July, 1958. For a
lecture that explains these components as the root of Vatican
II’s new orientation, consult the Audio CD lecture “Catholic
Identity Theft; The Components of Liberal Catholicism” by John
Vennari (from Oltyn Library Services, 2316 Delaware Ave, PMB
325, Buffalo NY 14216).
29.
“Cardinal:
Vatican-SSPX talks do not signal toleration of anti-Judaism,”
Catholic News Service, Nov. 8, 2012.
30.
“ADL Praise
Cardinal Koch’s Reaffirmation of Positive Relations Between
Catholics and Jews,” Anti-Defamation Press Release, November 12,
2012.
31.
The term
“teaching of contempt” was actually coined by Professor Jules
Isaac (1877-1963) the “French-Jewish historian” revered by Jews
the world over. In his many writings, Isaac waged war against
the Holy Gospels as the “true source” of anti- Semitism.
According to Isaac: “the permanent and latent source of
anti-Semitism is none other than Christian religious teaching of
every description and the traditional tendentious
interpretations of Scripture.” Since Jules Isaac rejected Jesus
Christ as Messiah, he necessarily rejected the New Testament as
the inspired, infallible Word of God. To him, the Gospels are
fallible human writings that can be critiqued, corrected, or
condemned. He is particularly virulent against the Gospel of
Matthew: “It is a veritable competition as to who can make the
Jews appear most hateful. Richly chequered and pathetic as is
the narrator of the fourth Gospel (St. John), the palm goes to
Matthew; his unerring hand unleashed the poisoned arrow that can
never be withdrawn.” Jules Isaac: Jesus et Israel, p,
571. Quoted in Judaism and the Vatican, Vicomte Leon de
Poncis, (first printed 1967, reprinted by Christian Book Club of
American, Palmdale, CA, 1999), p. 4
32. Details
of this evening of Jewish-Catholic dialogue are published “The
Gospel According to Non-Beleivers, Part I”, J. Vennari,
Catholic Family News, May, 2000.
33.
ADL Press
release, Nov. 12, 2012.
34. Msgr.
Joseph Clifford Fenton taught that a man who has sworn the Oath
Against Modernism, and then advances Modernism himself, or
allows Modernism to be advanced “would mark himself not only as
a sinner against the Catholic Faith but also as a common
perjurer. "Sacrorum Antistitum and the Background of the
Oath Against Modernism," Msgr. Joseph Clifford Fenton, The
American Ecclesiastical Review, October, 1960, pp. 259-260.
35. Juan
Cardinal de Torquemada (1388-1468) was a revered medieval
theologian responsible for the formulation of the doctrines that
were defined at the Council of Florence. Cardinal Torquemada
teaches: “Were the Pope to command anything against Holy
Scriptures, or the articles of faith, or the truth of the
sacraments, or the commands of the natural or divine law, he
ought not to be obeyed, but in such commands he is to be
disregarded. Citing the doctrine of Pope Innocent III, Cardinal
Torquemada further teaches: “Thus it is that Pope Innocent III
states (De Consuetudine) that it is necessary to obey the
Pope in all things as long as he, himself, does not go against
the universal customs of the Church, but should he go against
the universal customs of the Church, “he need not be followed
...” Sources: Summa de ecclesia (Venice: M. Tranmezium,
1561). Lib. II, c. 49, p. 163B. The English translation of this
statement of Juan de Torquemada is found in Patrick Granfield,
The Papacy in Transition (New York: Doubleday, 1980), p.
171. And in Father Paul Kramer, A Theological Vindication of
Roman Catholic Traditionalism, 2nd ed. (Kerala, India), p.
29.
36.
Saint
Robert Bellarmine, Doctor of the Church, taught “Just as it is
licit to resist the Pontiff that aggresses the body, it is also
licit to resist the one who aggresses the soul or who disturbs
civil order, or, above all, who attempts to destroy the Church.
I say that it is licit to resist him by not doing what he orders
and preventing his will from being executed; it is not licit,
however, to judge, punish or depose him, since these are acts
proper to a superior.” De Romano Pontifice, lib. II,
chap. 29, in Opera omnia, Neapoli/ Panormi/Paris: Pedone
Lauriel, 1871, vol. I, p. 418. For more, see “Resisting Wayward
Prelates, According to the Saints,” J. Vennari, Catholic
Family News, January 1998. (Reprint #259
available from CFN for $2.00US postpaid.) |
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