23 May 2013 Rabbis use Greek Philosophy #otdimjh

23 May 2013 “Socratic Torah” identifies Hellenistic Methods in Emergent Rabbinic Judaism #otdimjh

 

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It has long been argued that Judaism and Hellenism have been two mutually exclusive modes of thinking, but Jenny Labendz’s book adds to the growing weight of literature challenging this point. Emerging Rabbinic Judaism engaged with the philosophical methods of debate common in the Greco-Roman world, and were often more indebted to them than is usually supposed.

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Labendz’s book identifies a new sub-genre in rabbinic literature: rabbinic dialogue with a non-Jew and provides a comparison of rabbinic texts to Plato’s texts and to New Testament texts. She investigates rabbinic self-perception and self-fashioning within the non-Jewish social and intellectual world of antique Palestine, showing how the rabbis drew on Hellenistic and Roman concepts for Torah study and answering a fundamental question: was rabbinic participation in Greco-Roman society a begrudging concession or a principled choice? [OUP review]

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As Labendz demonstrates, Torah study was an intellectual arena in which rabbis were extremely unlikely to look beyond their private domain. Yet despite the highly internal and self-referential nature of rabbinic Torah study, some rabbis believed that the involvement of non-Jews in rabbinic intellectual culture enriched the rabbis’ own learning and teaching. Labendz identifies a sub-genre of rabbinic texts that she terms <“Socratic Torah,>” which portrays rabbis engaging in productive dialogue with non-Jews about biblical and rabbinic law and narrative.

In these texts, rabbinic epistemology expands to include reliance not only upon Scripture and rabbinic tradition, but upon intuitions and life experiences common to Jews and non-Jews. While most scholarly readings of rabbinic dialogues with non-Jews have focused on the polemical, hostile, or anxiety-ridden nature of the interactions, Socratic Torah reveals that the presence of non-Jews was at times a welcome opportunity for the rabbis to think and speak differently about Torah.

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Labendz contextualizes her explication of Socratic Torah within rabbinic literature at large, including other passages and statements about non-Jews as well as general intellectual trends in rabbinic literature, and also within cognate literatures, including Plato’s dialogues, Jewish texts of the Second Temple period, and the New Testament. While she focuses on non-Jews in the Palestinian Talmud and midrashim, the book includes chapters on the Babylonian Talmud and on the liminal figures of minim [heretics – possibly Jewish believers in Yeshua] and Matrona. The passages that make up the sub-genre of Socratic Torah serve as the entryway for a much broader understanding of rabbinic literature and rabbinic intellectual culture.

Socrates and the Jews

Prayer: All truth is God’s truth (Holm) and Maimonides advised “Accept the truth from whatever source it comes.” 

Lord – help us to know you as the Way, the Truth and the Life. Help us to recognize your truth as revealed in your living Word, the Messiah, your written Word, and your preached Word. Help us also to recognize your truth in all natural and human wisdom, including the wisdom and revelation in other cultures, philosophies and religious traditions. Help us not to denigrate the faith and wisdom of others, but rather see how all truth will be reconciled in your Son, our Messiah, Yeshua. Amen.

http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199934560.do#

http://www.press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/S/bo13107549.html

Readership: Students and scholars of rabbinic history, late antiquity, Judaism

Acknowledgments
Editions of Rabbinic Texts
Introduction
Chapter 1 Platonic and Rabbinic Dialogues Compared
Chapter 2 The Epistemological Implications of Socratic Torah
Chapter 3 Rabbinic Boundaries Expanded
Chapter 4 Socratic Torah Contested
Chapter 5 Multiple Audiences, Multiple Discourses
Chapter 6 The Wisdom of Non-Jews and its Relevance to Torah
Chapter 7 Rabbis and Non-Rabbis: Minim and Matrona
Chapter 8 Rabbis and Non-Jews in the Babylonian Talmud
Conclusion
Bibliography

See also Miriam Leonard’s

Socrates and the Jews

HELLENISM AND HEBRAISM FROM MOSES MENDELSSOHN TO SIGMUND FREUD

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MIRIAM LEONARD

264 pages | 6 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2012

“What has Athens to do with Jerusalem?” Asked by the early Christian Tertullian, the question was vigorously debated in the nineteenth century. While classics dominated the intellectual life of Europe, Christianity still prevailed and conflicts raged between the religious and the secular. Taking on the question of how the glories of the classical world could be reconciled with the Bible, Socrates and the Jewsexplains how Judaism played a vital role in defining modern philhellenism.

Exploring the tension between Hebraism and Hellenism, Miriam Leonard gracefully probes the philosophical tradition behind the development of classical philology and considers how the conflict became a preoccupation for the leading thinkers of modernity, including Matthew Arnold, Moses Mendelssohn, Kant, Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud. For each, she shows how the contrast between classical and biblical traditions is central to writings about rationalism, political subjectivity, and progress. Illustrating how the encounter between Athens and Jerusalem became a lightning rod for intellectual concerns, this book is a sophisticated addition to the history of ideas.
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22 May 1966 Harcourt Samuel reflects #otdimjh

22 May 1966 Harcourt Samuel reflects on 100 years of the Hebrew Christian Alliance of Great Britain #otdimjh

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Talk given by Rev. Harcourt Samuel, O.B.E. (Office of the Order of the British Empire, and the IHCS Executive Secretary) at the centenary celebration of the Hebrew Christian Alliance of Great Britain (now British Messianic Jewish Alliance).

[Harcourt Samuel was the son of Elijah Bendor-Samuel, Director of the Messianic Testimony after David Baron. Harcourt was General Secretary of the International Hebrew Christian Alliance (now IMJA) and Pastor of Ramsgate Baptist Church ,1934-49 and of Birchington Baptist Church, 1951-78. He was Mayor of Ramsgate.]

The 22nd May 1966, has long been a red-letter day in our diaries, for it marks the Centenary of the oldest of the Hebrew Christian Alliances that are now found in all parts of the world, that in Great Britain. It goes without saying that this special anniversary will be kept with great rejoicing by members of our Alliance. Its significance, though, will not go unmarked in other lands, for out of its work their Alliances grew. It will be a day on which we shall all unite in thanksgiving to God and for His blessing during one hundred years, and dedicate ourselves to Him afresh for whatever the next century may bring.

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The Alliance came into existence in answer to a need that had been felt by converted Jews for quite a long time. They knew that the baptism that brought them into the Christian Church had banished them from their own people, but they refused to accept that banishment; they were convinced they became true Israelites when they put their faith in Christ and were born again of His Spirit.

Whilst in many instances they felt completely at home in the churches they joined, they realized the necessity of emphasing their oneness with their people, that it might clearly be seen that in Christ is both Jew and Gentile and they have been made one. They felt, too, that by standing together their corporate witness would make a greater impression on their Jewish brothers and sisters than any of them, scattered throughout churches, could make alone.

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Photo of the 100th anniversary conference in 1966 – Harourt Samuel wearing his distinctive bow tie, middle row, centre, with Jacob Jocz on the left and Eric Lipson on right

National Alliances

Efforts to meet this need had been made before 1866. As far back as 1813, a group of forty-one Hebrew Christians formed an association to which they gave the name of Beni Abraham. This was at the Jews‘ Chapel in Palestine Place, the institution founded by the London Jews‘ Society (now known as the Church‘s Ministry to the Jews), to help converts by teaching printing and bookbinding. Its members promised to attend Divine Worship at the Chapel and to meet for prayer twice in the week, as well as to visit each other in times of sickness. Twenty-two years later, this association merged into the Episcopal Jews’ Chapel Abrahamic Society, which is still in existence, though in a very attenuated form, and it extends help as is possible to Jewish converts in need.

In 1855, an American Hebrew Christian Association was formed in New York; we have a record of the inaugural meeting and the terms of the founding resolution, though we know nothing of its subsequent history. We note with interest the object of the Association:

…the promotion of the spiritual interest of its members, the relief of those of their brethren, who for confessing Christ are suffering want and distress, the stirring up of the dry bones of the house of Israel, and the rousing of the Christian Church to more earnest prayer and increased effort for the salvation of Judah.

The members promised to know nothing among themselves save Jesus, their common Redeemer, and to cherish love to all that bear His image, by whatever name they may be called. Our object in the International Hebrew Christian Alliance could not be better expressed, and this true ecumenicity is our earnest desire as well.

In Britain, the need for such a fellowship continued to be felt. What was wanted was something wider than the Episcopal Jews’ Chapel Abrahamic Society could possibly be. In 1865, Dr. Carl Schwartz, Minister of Trinity Chapel, Edgware Road, London – founded by another Hebrew Christian, the Rev. Ridley Herschell – formed the Hebrew Christian Union, and commenced to edit the first Hebrew Christian magazine, The Scattered Nation. He chose the motto that has been our watchword ever since, ― Behold, how good and how pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity (Psa. 133:1).

Next year came the great step forward: Dr. Schwartz and seven other Hebrew Christians issued a circular letter inviting ― as many Israelites who believe in Jesus as can be brought together, ‖ to meet in London. Eighty met on the appointed day, and unanimously resolved that a Hebrew Christian Alliance be formed.

They explained the choice of the term ― Alliance‖ quite simply: ―As there exists an Evangelical (World’s Evangelical Alliance) and a Jewish (Alliance Israelite Universelle) a Hebrew Christian Alliance might also be formed.‖ Two things they emphasized: first, their identity with their people:

When we profess Christ we do not cease to be Jews. Paul, after his conversion did not cease to be a Jew; not only Saul was, but even Paul remained, a Hebrew of the Hebrews . . . As Hebrews, as Christians, we feel tied together, and as Hebrew Christians, we desire to be allied more closely to one another.

Secondly, a fellowship that leaped over denominational boundaries:

Though the members of the Alliance belong to different churches, they all feel united in Christ, and they declare before their Jewish brethren that they have found in Jesus the Messiah, to Whom the Law and the Prophets bear testimony, that they have peace in His blood, and look for His coming in glory as the Hope of Israel.

Small wonder that so soundly based a fellowship has endured and reached its centenary when more narrowly based associations have passed away.

Yet another Hebrew Christian organisation came into existence in 1882. Dr. H. A. Stern, who had rendered great service as a missionary to the Jews in Bagdad and Constantinople, and had spent four-and-a-half years in prison in Abyssinia, founded the Hebrew Christian Prayer Union. The members promised to join in a bond of private prayer each Saturday, and to join in general prayer meetings from time to time. It grew quickly, but after a time amalgamated with the Hebrew Christian Alliance which thereafter was known as the Hebrew Christian Alliance and Prayer Union.

At the turn of the century, the desire began to be felt for a similar Alliance on the American Continent, and a committee was formed in May 1901, the thirty-fifth anniversary of the founding of the Hebrew Christian Alliance in Britain.

Its labours bore fruit in a great Conference, the first Hebrew Christian Conference in the United States, at Mountain Lake Park, Maryland from the 28th to the 30th July, 1903. The British representative at this Conference was the Rev. E. Bendor Samuel, the father of the present writer. The decision was taken to organize a Hebrew Christian Alliance of America. Over the next twelve years, some preliminary conferences were held, but not till April 1915 did it come into existence. It, too, has flourished, and its Golden Jubilee was celebrated last year.

The International Alliance

After this, the formation of an International Hebrew Christian Alliance was inevitable. The American Alliance conceived the idea, but felt that the proper place for the inaugural conference was London. Its members commissioned the Rev. Mark John Levy, a Londoner by birth, but an American citizen by naturalization, to journey to London and lay the project before the Hebrew Christian Alliance and Prayer Union. The suggestion was taken up with enthusiasm.

It was widely felt that the time was ripe. The First World War of 1914-1918 had wrought tremendous changes in Jewry: it abolished the Pale of Settlement within which some 6,000,000 Jews were virtually confined, and it opened the doors of the ghettos.

There followed a great turning from traditional thought and ways: some turned to Communism, some to a nominal Christianity, some found true faith in Christ. There were stories of ― seekers after God‖ in Russia, and ― Christ-believing Jews‖ in Hungary, which had come into existence quite apart from the witness of the churches and missionary organizations. Palestine had been snatched from under the heel of the Turks, and the Balfour Declaration had promised the Jewish people a national home in the land of their fathers.

The call to the first International Hebrew Christian Conference, signed by Samuel Schor, J. J. Lowe, and E. Bendor Samuel, expressed the faith that faced that stirring hour:

We believe that the times of the Gentiles are being fulfilled and that the God of our fathers, according to His gracious promise, is about to restore Israel to her ancient heritage. We also believe that as Hebrew Christians, though a remnant weak and small, we have a share in the building up of “the Tabernacle of David that is fallen down.”

Very gladly did the Alliance in Britain take on the tremendous task of organising this conference without having any machinery in hand, and its members rejoiced wholeheartedly when the conference met on the 5th September, 1925, and when the International Hebrew Christian Alliance was born. The choice of London for the headquarters of the new Alliance followed naturally. To avoid confusion, the Hebrew Christian Alliance and Prayer Union changed its name again and became, as now, the Hebrew Christian Alliance of Great Britain.

The two affiliated Alliances (Britain and America) quickly grew to fifteen, but the upheaval of the Second World War (1939-1945), and the coming of the Iron Curtain reduced the number to five; more have since been added and there are ten today, spread over all five continents. These look to the Alliance founded in London in 1866 as the mother of them all; all have sent messages to mark the centenary day.

It is not easy to review the work and witness of a hundred years within the compass of a short article, specially when by its very nature much has been done quietly and unobtrusively. It must suffice to contrast the world of 1866 with the world of today: how much has befallen the Jewish people in this century, how much they have endured, how different their circumstances now.

Through all these changes the Alliance has held quietly on its way, its ranks constantly increased by men and women who have come to know Jesus as their Savior and Messiah, and who acknowledge two great loyalties, to Him as their Lord, and to their people, His and theirs. Its objects are unchanged; its ministry continues in deepening the spiritual lives of its members, in encouraging them to bear their witness bravely, in caring for them in times of special need. When so much has altered, it is something to have survived and maintained the testimony. Humbly we would say with the great apostle, “Having therefore obtained help of God, I continue unto this day.”

Founders and Presidents

If we cannot say more about the long years of steady labour we may, perhaps, recall the honoured names of some whose leadership was a means of grace within the Alliance and to the Church as a whole. Amongst the founders were Moses Margoliouth and C. D. Ginsburg, both of whom were members of the Revision Committee responsible for the English Revised Version of the Old Testament issued in 1885, and Adolph Saphir, Minister of St. Mark‘s Presbyterian Church, Greenwich, and gifted writer and Bible teacher.

The roll of presidents includes Maxwell Ben Oliel, well known on both sides of the Atlantic; Isaac Levinson, secretary of the British Jews Society; and David Baron and C. A. Schonberger, founders of the Hebrew Christian Testimony to Israel.

The list continues with Samuel Schor, also remembered for his Palestine exhibitions that brought a knowledge of the Holy Land to many before it was possible to visit the country as easily as it is today. Serving as well, were E. Bendor Samuel, who had previously served for many years as secretary; I. E. Davidson of the Barbican mission to the Jews; and H. C. Carpenter, who before his retirement had been president of the Polish Hebrew Christian Alliance. Dr. Arnold Frank was a loved vice- president.

The recital of these names gives some idea of the caliber of those who created and maintained the Alliance, as well as of the breadth of the knowledge and experience they brought to it. They are an inspiration to us today.

Looking Ahead

And what of the future? The aims of 1866 remain those of 1966. The years ahead may bring greater changes even than those behind, but until the glad day comes when all Israel shall be saved, those aims will remain.

Neither a church nor a missionary society, neither a congregation nor a sect, we are a fellowship in Christ, ready to help one another spiritually, and if needs be, materially too, the better to bear our God-given witness towards our Jewish brethren, and within the Christian Church.

To the former, we confess ― “we have found Him of whom Moses in the Law and the prophets did write, Jesus”; to the latter we offer visible proof that ― “God hath not cast away His people which He foreknew,”1 that ― “at this present time there is a remnant according to the election of grace.”2 We celebrate the Centenary with humble gratitude and with a renewed consecration, and we joice that in that gratitude and consecration so many Christian friends throughout the country share.

Prayer: Thank you Lord for the vision, aims and history of the Hebrew Christian Alliance, from its founding in 1866 to the present. May you give wisdom to it today, and to Jewish believers in Yeshua throughout the world, as they continue to unite in the bond of sympathy and prayer, for the blessing of Israel and the nations, and to the glory of your name. Amen.

http://imja.org/these-hundred-years/

http://www.ramsgatetown.org/town-council/history/hsamuel.aspx

Years Elected: 1944, 1955, 1956, 1957

History:
Eldest son of London Minister, Rev. Samuel was brought up under the
influence of the church. However, before entering the Ministry he had
held a business position in London, giving him valuable experience.

Travelled extensively visiting Italy, Egypt, Palestine & the United States.

Lived in Ramsgate for eleven years prior to 1944 during which time he
has lived through peace and war time.

Rev. Samuel began his ministry in Lambourne End, Sussex.

After 8 years in Lambourne End moved to Ramsgate to carry on his
ministry at the Cavendish Baptist Church.

Elected vice-president of the Kent and Sussex Baptist organisation in
1943.

In 1937 he was co-opted as a member of the Ramsgate Education
Committee.

Member of the town council from 1941 for Central Ward.

Elected Chairman of civil defence committee in 1942.

1943 held vice-chairmanship of the housing and town planning
committee.  Actively involved with work of the General Hospital.

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21 May 1830 Birth of Pastor Faltin #otdimjh

21 May 1830 Birth of Rudolph Faltin, Lutheran Pastor, mentor of Joseph Rabinowitz and godfather of Herman Gurland #otdimjh

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Rudolf Ernst Karl Faltin (born May 21, Jul. / 2 June 1830 Greg, in Riga ; died 27 January 1918 in Riga) was a Protestant pastor and a missionary . His influence over Joseph Rabinowitz and Rudolph Herman Gurland, amongst others, shows that he himself played a remarkable role in the formation of the early Messianic Jewish movement. He is mentioned at least sixteen times in Raymond Lillevik’s important book on Gurland, Lucky and Lichtenstein, Apostates, Hybrids, or True Jews? Jewish Christians and Jewish Identity in Eastern Europe, 1860–1914.

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From 1852-1855 Faltin studied theology in Dorpat (Tartu). After that, he worked for two years from 1856-58 as a parish assistant in Arkhangelsk in the evangelical community before 1859 his ordination was in Riga. He went to Chisinau (Kishinev) in the former Bessarabia (now Chisinau in Moldova ), where he held numerous spiritual tasks. He was a military chaplain working for the Russian military stationed there.

He also served as an evangelical church pastor the parish of the Bessarabian Germans before in Kishinev. In addition, he supervised the far-flung Lutheran communities of the parish in the middle, western and north ofBessarabia. In addition, he was teacher of religion at the high school in Kishinev. In 1890 he became the dean of the First South Russian Probst district appointed by the Protestant Church, which was part of the consistory in St. Petersburg. Here he was chaplain of all pastors who were active in the Bessarabian Lutheran congregations. In 1903 retired for reasons of age and he moved back to Riga. Rudolf Faltin is known mainly as a successful missionary to the Jews in the Russian Jewish community. He was the agent of the London Society. His brother was Alexander Faltin.

Rudolph Faltin was married three times. His grave is in Mitau (Jelgawa).

Prayer: Thank you Lord for this devoted servant of yours, who was in the right place at the right time to have a significant influence on some of the founder and anticipators of the modern Messianic Jewish movement. Help us to understand the times and seasons in which we live, and to play our parts in your unfolding purposes for your people Israel and all nations. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://blog.mappingmessianicjewishtheology.eu/post/117403821528/26-april-1864-rabbi-rudolp-hermann-gurland-affirms

On April 26, 1864, Gurland and his wife were baptized by Pastor Faltin. In accordance with church tradition and Russian law, their names were changed. That Gurland chose “Rudolf Hermann” indicates that the minister was his godfather. Marie was named after Faltin’s wife, Emma. The law in 1850 did not allow Russian Jewish converts to take new surnames.(Raymond Lillevik, Apostates, Hybrids, or True Jews? Jewish Christians and Jewish Identity in Eastern Europe, 1860–1914, 56)

Rabinowitz himself was accused by Faltin of “Ebionitism” (though curiously, Faltin nonetheless praised his effective evangelistic preaching!) (Kjær-Hansen 1995, 142).

http://media.ctsfw.edu/Item/GetFullText/302

http://www.lcje.net/papers/1991/Kjaer-Hansen2.pdf

(fromBernsteinFriedman, Rev. George, a convert of Pastor Faltin, in Kischineff, became his assistant there about 1885. He then translated the Lutheran Catechism into Hebrew. Having afterwards sojourned for a time in Jerusalem, he went from there to London, and was after a while appointed by the British Society as missionary at Wilna, and he has since been doing faithful work for the Master in various towns in Russia. In 1895, the year of the great and horrible pogroms, he rendered great and immortal service by consoling and supporting the poor suffering Jews.

Gurland, Rev. Rudolf Hermann, born in Wilna, 1836, of a family which were Spanish Gentile Christians, who became Jews and had fled from the Inquisition at the beginning of the eighteenth century into Russia. The father was a strictly orthodox and bigoted Jew, and sent his son to various yeshivas (rabbinical colleges), so that in 1857 he received the title of Doctor, and was called to be the President of the Seminary at Berditscheff, where he remained till 1860. He tried at first to introduce reform in the Synagogue, and wrote a work under the title “Das Judenthum und die Reformversuche des 17 und 18 Jahrhundert” (only in M.S.), but won no sympathy for his attempt. Meeting a traveller in 1862, he received from him a Hebrew New Testament, and at the same time learned from him about Pastor Faltin’s missionary activity at Kischineff. He went there and became rabbi of a congregation. One day he came to Faltin and asked him if he could get him pupils for caligraphy and drawing, and showed him some specimens of his work. Faltin tried to do so but failed, and then proposed that they should read the Hebrew Bible[251]together. Gurland agreed, but made it a condition that the main issue between Judaism and Christianity should not be introduced. Some time passed in reading book after book of the Old Testament, and Gurland gave no sign of any change in him. They were reading Isaiah liii. for the second time. When Faltin finished, Gurland said, “Read it over again,” but he could not wait till he had done so, because he was inwardly moved, and went home in silence. Faltin then fell on his knees and earnestly prayed that God might open the eyes of the rabbi to see Christ in all His glory. The next time Gurland came, he asked Faltin to read again the same chapter; and then he could no longer resist the striving of the spirit within his heart, and exclaimed, “I do not know what it is, I now find much in the Bible which I have not found before, although I know it by heart. The chapter must refer to your Jesus, and I must soon acknowledge that He is the promised Messiah.” The result of this meeting was, that the rabbi became the pupil of the pastor, receiving frequent instruction from him in the doctrines of the Gospel. But this frequent intercourse between them could not fail to be observed by the Jews, yet they at first had not the slightest suspicion of the rabbi’s intention, but on the contrary thought that Faltin was inclined to embrace Judaism. In fact, one of them told this to one of his congregation. This man came to the pastor and questioned him about it, and was assured by him that he would never deny his Saviour, but it was possible that Gurland might embrace Christianity. Several[252] rabbis came now to Gurland and, like the Protestant, asked him whether Faltin wished to become a Ger (proselyte) to Judaism. This brought the matter to a climax, and he confessed before them all that Jesus was the Messiah and proved his convictions from the Bible. They cried, “You have a false Bible,” but he answered, “Compare it with your own and see whether it is false.” What he had to suffer afterwards, need not here be described. He and his wife were baptized on Easter Sunday, 1864, before a large congregation of Christians and Jews. He then studied theology in Berlin, returned to Kischineff and became assistant pastor to Faltin, when many Jewish converts were the result of their labours. Gurland was later chief pastor at Mitau, working at the same time among the Jews. His latter years were devoted to spreading the New Testament in Wilna, Odessa and the Baltic provinces, under the auspices of the Mildmay Mission to the Jews. Professor Delitzsch called him “A noble soul.”

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20 May 2015 “The Dagger of Faith” #otdimjh

20 May 2015 First Pugio Fidei Doctoral Dissertation defended #otdimj

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Raymundus Martini[2] was an innovative missionary preacher and Dominican monk who spent his life engaged in debate and apologetics with Jews and Moslems in 13th century Spain.

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His major work, the Pugio Fidei (“Dagger of Faith”) has been the major source, both acknowledged or plagiarised, of apologetic material for Jewish evangelism, up to the present day.[3] Martini developed in detail and systematised a new methodology in Jewish-Christian encounter that had been introduced by Paulus Christiani in his 1963 debate with Nachmanides.[4] Arthur Lukyn Williams, author of Christian Evidences for the Jewish People, a major 20th century work of apologetics, wrote: “It is to be much wished that an abbreviated edition of the PF were published, incorporating the Jewish quotations, with some of Voisin’s notes, and adding notes and explanations more suitable to our own day. It would form a valuable introduction to the study of Jewish literature.”[5]

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Martini’s life and works identify him as one of the most impressive students of Judaism and Islam of his or any period in history.[6] His longevity and possible Jewish ancestry make him a fascinating figure for historical research. The negative assessment of his strategy by his rival the great mystic and philosopher Ramon Lull, and the charge of falsifying midrashim made against him by modern scholars, show that he was not only involved in controversy, but was c controversial figure himself. His major works show development in his philosophical method, influenced as he was by the writings of his teacher Thomas Aquinas in his engagement with Aristotelian thought. They demonstrate his growing understanding of Judaism, of both the Rabbinic midrashic tradition and the emerging Kabbalah. His relecture of this material in the aid of evangelistic proclamation challenges the political correctness and hermeneutical conventions of today. We will examine the effectiveness of his arguments, and see whether they spoke more to his captive audiences or to assuage the doubts of his own constituency.

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Martini’s approach also forced Jewish respondents to find new defences for their faith. The sharpening of the distinctives of Christianity and Judaism that emerged as a result of such detailed study of one tradition by another were to pave the way for critiques of the Christian tradition itself that fuelled the Renaissance and Reformation in Christian Europe. The philosophical issues involved in the Jewish-Christian debate whose agenda had been set and summarised by Martini were to pull the greatest minds in each tradition into the harness of polemic and propaganda.

Today sees the defense of a doctoral dissertation by Syds Wiersma, a young Dutch scholar, and a day conference devoted to medieval apologetics. As far as I am aware, this is the first PhD to focus on this major work.

 

Prayer: You know, O Lord, the methods and motives of medieval apologists, and the context and climate of anti-Judaism in which they lived. Father, forgive their theological prejudice against Jews and Judaism. Help us to show your reconcling love, mercy and forgiveness to all, we pray. In Yeshua’s name. Amen.

https://www.dropbox.com/s/dwurawcgzy4x89g/Edit%20Mishkan%20Pugio%20article%20231111a.docx%20-%20Dropbox.html?dl=0

https://www.tilburguniversity.edu/current/events/show/symposium-jews-and-christians/

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=692241827571127&set=a.144996358962346.27764.100003559478172&type=1&theater

http://www.waddenacademie.nl/nieuws/nieuwsbericht/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=956&cHash=3f65961751559f1c04b0c682a037f150

https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=NfNli0QOJtgC&pg=PA201&lpg=PA201&dq=Syds+Wiersma+marti&source=bl&ots=6nPek7YK19&sig=pKRWGbO26j0vx6uQE-KlTN574ww&hl=en&sa=X&ei=S4BbVbvbL4uX7Qb-rIPACw&ved=0CEQQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q&f=false

[1] This post is a revised and abbreviated version of Richard Harvey, “Raymundus Martini and the Pugio Fidei: A Survey of the Life and Works of a Medieval Controversialist” (MA Diss. London: University College London, 1991,http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/raymundus-martini-and-the-pugio-fidei/1838270 ).

[2] Referred to throughout as Martini. Also known as Rámon, Raimundus, Raymond; Martin, Martinus, Martí, Martinez. Schiller-Szinessy’s conjectures that that “the name ‘Martini’ arose no doubt from the wrongly applied Latin genitive” is without any basis (Schiller-Szinessy, S.M., “The Pugio Fidei”, Cambridge Journal of Philology 16 (1888) pp. 131-152, 134). If he was the son of a better-known “Martin”, this may point to possible Jewish origin. See below.

[3] Raymundus Martini O.P., Pugio Fidei adversus Mauros et Judaeos cum Observationibus Josephi de Voisin et Introductione Jo. Benedicti Carpzovi (Leipzig, F. Lanckisi, 1687, reprint ed. Gregg Press, Farnborough, 1967, available online at). The 1651 edition is now available for online download at http://sammlungen.ub.uni-frankfurt.de/freimann/urn/urn:nbn:de:hebis:30-180010007009 (accessed November 2011). I am grateful to Jorgé Quiñónez for this information.

[4] For an account of the debate and the development of the new argumentation see Robert Chazan, Daggers of Faith (USA: University of California Press, 1989) and Robet Chazan, “From Friar Paul to Friar Raymond: The Development of Innovative Missionising Argumentation”, Harvard Theological Review 76:3 (1983), pp. 289-306.

[5] A. L. Lukyn Williams, Adversus Judaeos (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1935), 255.

[6] J.M. Llovera’s “Raimundus Martini, un Teologico Espanol” in Christiandad 2(1945), 539-43, 3 (1946) pp. 4-7 surveys briefly Martini’s theological contribution. Recent studies are found in Harvey J. Hames. The Art of Conversion: Christianity and Kabbalah in the thirteenth century (Leiden: Brill, 2000); Harvey J. Hames. “Reason and Faith: Inter-religious Polemic and Christian Identity in the Thirteenth Century” in Religious Apologetics – Philosophical Argumentation (Yossef Schwartz and Volkhard Krech, eds.) (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2004), 267-284.

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19 May 1909 Birth of Kindertransport founder #otdimjh

19 May 1909 Birthday of Nicolas Winton (died 1 July 2015), Kindertransport organizer who saved 669 children from the Holocaust #otdimjh

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Sir Nicholas George Winton, MBE (born Nicholas Wertheim, 19 May 1909) is a British humanitarian who organized the rescue of 669, mostly Jewish, children from Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia on the eve of the Second World War, in an operation later known as the Czech Kindertransport. Winton found homes for the children and arranged for their safe passage to Britain. The British press has dubbed him the “British Schindler”. On 28 October 2014 he was awarded the highest honour of the Czech Republic, the Order of the White Lion, by Czech President Miloš Zeman. [from Wikipedia]

Nicholas Winton was born on 19 May 1909 in Hampstead, London, a son of German Jewish parents who had moved to London two years earlier. The family name was Wertheim, but they changed it to Winton in an effort at integration. They also converted to Christianity, and Winton was baptised.

In 1923, Winton entered Stowe School, which had just opened. He left without graduating, attending night school while volunteering at the Midland Bank. He then went to Hamburg, where he worked at Behrens Bank, followed by Wasserman Bank in Berlin. In 1931, he moved to France and worked for the Banque Nationale de Crédit in Paris. He also earned a banking qualification in France. Returning to London, he became a broker at the London Stock Exchange. Though a stockbroker, Winton was also “an ardent socialist who became close to Labour Party party luminaries Aneurin Bevan, Jennie Lee and Tom Driberg.” Through another socialist friend, Martin Blake, Winton became part of a leftwing circle opposed to appeasement and concerned about the dangers posed by the Nazis.

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Humanitarian work

Shortly before Christmas 1938, Winton was planning to travel to Switzerland for a skiing holiday. He decided instead to visit Prague and help Martin Blake, who was in Prague as an associate of the British Committee for Refugees from Czechoslovakia, and had called Winton to ask him to assist in Jewish welfare work. Winton single-handedly established an organisation to aid children from Jewish families at risk from the Nazis. He set up his office at a dining room table in his hotel in Wenceslas Square. In November 1938, following the Kristallnacht in Nazi-ruled Germany, the House of Commons approved a measure to allow the entry into Britain of refugees younger than 17, provided they had a place to stay and a warranty of £50 was deposited for their eventual return to their own country.

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The Netherlands

An important obstacle was getting official permission to cross into the Netherlands, as the children were destined to embark on the ferry at Hoek van Holland. After the Kristallnacht in November 1938, the Dutch government officially closed its borders to any Jewish refugees. The border guards, marechaussee, searched for them and returned any found to Germany, despite the horrors of Kristallnacht being well known: from the border, the synagogue in Aachen could be seen burning just 3 miles away.

Winton succeeded, thanks to the guarantees he had obtained from Britain. After the first train, crossing the Netherlands went smoothly. A Dutch woman, Geertruida Wijsmuller-Meijer saved another 1000 Jewish children, mostly from Vienna and Berlin via the Hook, though it is not known whether she and Winton ever met. In 2012, a statue was erected on the quay at the Hook to commemorate all who had saved Jewish children.

Winton found homes in Britain for 669 children, many of whose parents would perish in the Auschwitz concentration camp. Winton’s mother worked with him to place the children in homes and later hostels. Throughout the summer, Winton placed advertisements seeking families to accept them. The last group of 250, scheduled to leave Prague on 1 September 1939, did not reach safety. Hitler had invaded Poland and the Second World War had begun.

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Rev John Fieldsend (born Hans Heinrich Feige), a former Anglican vicar and my boss at CMJ in the 1980s, tells his story here and here:

He escaped Prague at the age of seven with his older brother Gert, leaving behind his mother Trude and father Curt. The Feiges, a German-Czech Jewish family, had fled to Czechoslovakia from Germany in 1937 only to find themselves again under threat.

“By April 1939 my parents realised the game was up, and my father sat my brother and me down and told us we were going on a long journey,” he recalls. He and Gert soon found themselves standing on a station platform, one small suitcase each, saying farewell to their mother. “As it came time to leave, she took off her wristwatch and gave it to us,” he remembers. “For us it was a mixture of fear and adventure – we didn’t really understand.”

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The pain of separation from parents was put to one side as the children adapted to their new lives. “At that age you just want to get on with life, to bury the past in a big black hole,” says John. “I learnt English in eight weeks and forgot German in eight weeks. We were able to correspond for a week or two with our parents via the Red Cross, but then nothing.”

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Prayer: Thank you Lord for Nicholas Winton, the role he played in organising the kindertransport, and all the lives he saved. What a tremendous example of courage and love he demonstrated. Help us to love in practical ways, especially in the face of evil. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://www.brentwoodgazette.co.uk/Holocaust-evacuee-warns-need-learn-lessons/story-20555965-detail/story.html

http://doverbroeckscollege.blogspot.co.uk/2015/04/we-were-recently-visited-by-john.html

https://www.facebook.com/awonderingjew

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/09/british-schindler-nicholas-winton-interview

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/10064216/The-unsung-British-hero-with-his-own-Schindlers-List.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_nFuJAF5F0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0aoifNziKQ

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8227798.stm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Winton

Nicholas Winton was born in May 1909, and baptised a Christian. He does not subscribe to any faith. (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8227798.stm)

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/09/british-schindler-nicholas-winton-interview

He has never been burdened, says Barbara, by an introspective nature. He just gets on with it and takes life as it comes – probably the secret of reaching 105. Religion has, though, always interested him, and I ask him whether he wonders what comes next, what’s beyond this life. “I don’t think anything comes next. I don’t think there is a next.” Does that bother him? “It’s no use bothering about something that you can’t affect.”

Winton has come to see religion as organised hypocrisy. “I know crowds of people who go to church and the synagogue who aren’t religious. What is needed is something in which they can all believe irrespective of religion, which in most cases, dare I say it, is a facade. We need something else, and that something is ethics. Goodness, kindness, love, honesty. If people behaved ethically, no problem.” He has bent the ear of his local MP, Theresa May, about this, and says that whenever she sees him she immediately says “Ethics!”.

He is pessimistic about the future, anxious about nuclear weapons and our spiralling capacity for destruction. He also doubts that the probing eye of round-the-clock TV news will ensure that the mass delusion and passivity of democracies in the 1930s never recurs. “It needs more than that. It needs a complete reconception of life. Too late for me. ‘Know then thyself, presume not God to scan / The proper study of Mankind is Man.’ Whether that works I don’t know. It’s hasn’t worked so far.”

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18 May 1911 Death of Gustav Mahler #otdimjh

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18 May 1911 Death of Gustav Mahler #otdimjh

18 May 1911 Death of Gustav Mahler – Composer, Jew and Catholic?

mahler

Gustav Mahler (7 July 1860 – 18 May 1911) was an Austrian late-Romantic composer, and one of the leading conductors of his generation. As a composer he acted as a bridge between the 19th century Austro-German tradition and the modernism of the early 20th century. While in his lifetime his status as a conductor was established beyond question, his own music gained wide popularity only after periods of relative neglect which included a ban on its performance in much of Europe during the Nazi era. After 1945 the music was discovered and championed by a new generation of listeners; Mahler then became one of the most frequently performed and recorded of all composers, a position he has sustained into the 21st century.

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Born in humble circumstances, Mahler displayed his musical gifts at an early age. After graduating from the Vienna Conservatory in 1878, he held a succession of conducting posts of rising importance in the opera houses of Europe, culminating in his appointment in 1897 as director of the Vienna Court Opera (Hofoper).

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During his ten years in Vienna, Mahler—who had [supposedly – see below] converted to Catholicism to secure the post—experienced regular opposition and hostility from the anti-Semitic press.

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Nevertheless, his innovative productions and insistence on the highest performance standards ensured his reputation as one of the greatest of opera conductors, particularly as an interpreter of the stage works of Wagner and Mozart. Late in his life he was briefly director of New York’s Metropolitan Opera and the New York Philharmonic.

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Mahler’s œuvre is relatively small; for much of his life composing was necessarily a part-time activity while he earned his living as a conductor.

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Aside from early works such as a movement from a piano quartet composed when he was a student in Vienna, Mahler’s works are designed for large orchestral forces, symphonic choruses and operatic soloists. Most of his twelve symphonic scores are very large-scale works, often employing vocal soloists and choruses in addition to augmented orchestral forces. These works were often controversial when first performed, and several were slow to receive critical and popular approval; exceptions included his Symphony No. 2, Symphony No. 3, and the triumphant premiere of his Eighth Symphony in 1910.

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Some of Mahler’s immediate musical successors included the composers of the Second Viennese School, notably Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg and Anton Webern. Shostakovich and Benjamin Britten are among later 20th-century composers who admired and were influenced by Mahler. The International Gustav Mahler Institute was established in 1955 to honour the composer’s life and work.

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Reflection and prayer: The question of the genuineness and reasons for Mahler’s conversion to Roman Catholicism has been much discussed. The majority of commentators and biographers do not see sincere motives of faith, but business and practical reasons, to secure the position of director of the Vienna State Opera. However, there are religious and Christian themes in Mahler’s music, and who are we to judge?

 

Thank you Lord for the beauty and drama of Mahler’s music, which well match the tumultuous life and challenges he faced. Only you O Lord can discern our inner thoughts and motives. Have mercy on us, we pray. In Yeshua’s name. Amen.

http://www.mfiles.co.uk/composers/Gustav-Mahler.htm

http://www.nytimes.com/1999/08/22/arts/l-mahler-and-religion-forced-to-be-christian-136425.html

http://www.actproductions.co.uk/productions/mahlers-conversion

http://soar.wichita.edu/bitstream/handle/10057/2016/t08051.pdf

http://www.theguardian.com/stage/2001/oct/03/theatre.artsfeatures2

Theatre

Mahler’s Conversion

http://www.echo.ucla.edu/Volume3-issue2/knapp_draughon/knapp_draughon1.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustav_Mahler

Gustav Mahler was born on 7 July 1860 in Bohemia and died on 18 May 1911 aged 50. His father was an innkeeper, and Gustav was the second of 14 children, though many of his siblings died as children, and his musical gifted brother Otto committed suicide in 1895.(http://www.mfiles.co.uk/composers/Gustav-Mahler.htm)

In 1901 he married Alma Schindler and they had two daughters together, Anna and Maria. His early marriage seemed to be happy, and some love themes in his works depict Alma or his relationship with her. Strains began to show in their marriage after the tragic death of Maria, aged four, following completion of Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder. On top of this he was diagnosed with a fatal heart condition and subject not just to musical criticism but also public expressions of anti-Semitism. Some years later, when Mahler’s works were beginning to receive a certain recognition, Alma had succumbed to alcoholism. At the sanatorium where she was treated she met and had an affair with Walter Gropius.

A life so full of tragic events clearly had a major influence on much of Mahler’s output, though there is also much in his music which expresses joy and hope. Mahler has said that his music is about life, and there is clearly an autobiographical aspect to his works, where a “hero” struggles with the meaning of life, death, love and disappointment. However, Mahler withdrew any programmatic comments he had previously made about his compositions saying that they should be appreciated as pure music and this is indeed the best approach.

Mahler’s musical career:

As a child, Mahler was exposed to many musical influences including military music in a local barracks, folk music of various forms at various events, local musicians playing in his father’s tavern and Jewish bands. Although his family were Jewish he was a chorister in a Catholic Church where he also learned piano from the choir master. He won prizes as a pianist and obtained a place in the Vienna Conservatory.

Although always interested in composing, and having composed a number of works before the age of 20 (most now lost), he pursued a successful career as a concert or opera conductor, including posts at Kassel, Prague, Budapest, Hamburg, Leipzig, Vienna, and latterly regular visits to New York. The hugely successful Vienna post, at the height of his conducting career, he secured by converting to Catholicism, and held for 10 years. To the outside world, composing was a sideline and his works frequently being met with disbelief from critics and public alike. His success as a conductor was without doubt and, in that occupation, he also had a reputation for being uncompromising. However, composing was his first love and he developed a routine for composing first at Steinbach during the summer, then at Carinthia at a retreat specially built for that purpose, and later at Tobalch in the Tyrol.

Gustav Mahler – his Major Works:

Mahler’s major works are his symphonies and song-cycles, though these two genres overlap. Several of his symphonies having voices and choruses and Das Lied von der Erde can be considered to be a hybrid work, which Mahler did not want to overtly call a Symphony because of the superstitious observation that BeethovenSchubert and Bruckner died after completing their 9th symphony. For many years his symphonies had a reputation for being difficult, by virtue not only of their technical demands, but also because of their length and need for considerable resources. However, most major orchestras play Mahler works these days, even including many youth and amateur orchestras.

His Symphonies are often divided into 3 or more groupings, although with differing opinions on the boundaries between these groupings. The first 4 or 5 symphonies are referred to as the Wunderhorn symphonies because of the use of thematic material which appears in the Wunderhorn song cycle. The 5th through 7th come from a mature middle period with interleaving tragic and optimistic elements. Das Lied von der Erde, the 9th and 10th are the late period exhibiting greater complexity, modernistic trends and with increasing thoughts of death. The 8th can be grouped both ways or considered as a stand-alone work. Perhaps the most well-known work of Mahler’s is the Adagietto to his 5th symphony which was used in Visconti’s film “Death in Venice”.

(The score on the right shows the first page of his 6th Symphony.)

Symphony No.1 in D (1884-1888) [originally “Titan” with an additional movement called Blumine]
(Extract of 2nd movement: PlayMIDI or MP3 – Star Trek: Voyager)
(Extract of 3rd movement: PlayMIDI or MP3 – Frere Jaques)
Symphony No.2 in Cm (1888-1894) [“Resurrection” from the text by Friedrich Klopstock, with solo voices and chorus]
Symphony No.3 in Dm (1895-1896) [with solo contralto and boys and female choirs]
Symphony No.4 in G (1899-1900) [with solo soprano]
Symphony No.5 in C#m (1901-1902)
(Extract of 4th movement: PlayMIDI or MP3 – Death in Venice)
Symphony No.6 in Am (1903-1905)
Symphony No.7 in Bm (1904-1905)
(Extract of 2nd movement: PlayMIDI or MP3 – Castrol commercial)
Symphony No.8 in Eb (1906-1907) [“Symphony of a Thousand” or at least several hundred including solo voices and several choirs]
Symphony No.9 in D (1909-1910)
Symphony No.10 in F#m (1910 unfinished)
[The first movement of this last symphony was completed but the remainder was reconstructed by Deryck Cooke in 1964 from extensive sketches left by the composer. Other alternative reconstructions exist.]

Cantata – Das Klagende Lied (1878-1880)
Song Cycle – Lieder Eines Fahrenden Gesellen [Songs of a Wayfarer] (1884)
Song Cycle – Des Knaben Wunderhorn [Youth’s Magic Horn] (1888-99)
Song Cycle – Kindertotenlieder [Songs on the Death of Children] (1901-1904)
Song Cycle – Funf Lieder nach Ruckert [Five Ruckert Songs] (1905)
Song-Symphony – Das Lied von der Erde [Song of the Earth] (1907-1909)

It is worth noting that Mahler revised some of his works to improve things which he wasn’t entirely happy with, so some of these works are available in different versions. Unless you’re a musicologist or a “Mahlerite” (as his most ardent fans are sometimes called), this generally won’t affect your listening and the differences won’t be apparent.

The complete box-set of Mahler Symphonies with Klaus Tennstedt conducting the London Philharmonic Orchestra can be recommended as an excellent and good value place to start. More in depth reviews by Tony Duggan of alternative recordings can be found at Classical Music on the Web and there is a summary and additional links at www.zzsounds.com. Better still, a live concert can be quite an experience.

Mahler’s style and influences

The peace of his summer retreats allowed Mahler to concentrate on composing, and sounds invoking nature in various ways can be found in many of his works including birdcalls, hunting horns and cowbells. He also used a variety of military and band music styles which presumably the young Mahler picked up from the local barracks and his father’s tavern among other sources.

Mahler is labelled a late Romantic composer denoting the freer type of music which developed after the stricter Classical period. He produced large-scale dramatic works with enormous contrasts in sounds and moods, and has been quoted as saying that his music is “about life”. This is evident from the juxtaposition of tragedy, humour, love, and other extremes of emotion, conveying melancholy and pathos amid joy, strength and consolation within tragedy, and the knowing use of self-mocking irony and sarcasm. Mahler’s music can certainly have much going on simultaneously at various levels, sometimes making it complex and difficult to understand on first hearing but the persistent listener is amply rewarded with some of the most sublime music ever written.

Mahler has clearly been influenced by a number of other composers such as Beethoven for his large-scale symphonic construction, and use of voices within symphonic form, and after a study of the music of J. S. Bach has incorporated elements of counterpoint into his works.Berlioz also seems to have been an influence especially the use of material and its ironic treatment in the Symphonie Fantastique, and perhaps Franz Liszt in terms of thematic development. Mahler has also learned much on symphonic form from his one-time teacher,Bruckner, and through him the work of Richard Wagner in conveying grand emotional dramas. Although not mentioned as a specific influence, the works of Antonin Dvorak andPyotr Tchaikovsky would also have been known by Mahler and have surely had an influence on his symphonic output, particularly the latter’s use of marches and waltzes in his symphonies and the concluding adagio of his 6th symphony “the Pathetique”.

Mahler’s contemporaries included Richard Strauss, with whom he is sometimes linked as a late romantic, the tragic song writer Hugo Wolf, and Hans RottJohannes Brahms was a friend and advisor to Mahler, although musically they shared little beyond the romantic expression within classical forms. Mahler in turn has also had a significant influence onArnold SchonbergWebern and Berg to whom he has perhaps given some early pointers to new musical directions, including a degree of atonality, and the use of off-stage musicians or separate ensembles to add to the normal orchestral sounds. Mahler’s music has continued to influence composers well into the 20th century including HoneggerBrittenSibelius,BoulezStockhausen and especially the soviet composer Dmitri Shostakovich, who adopted Mahler’s taste for martial music and further developed his use of satire to sometimes bizarre and grotesque extremes. Indeed upon inspection there are connections between Mahler’s 1st and Shostakovich’s 4th symphonies. The film composer John Williams has stated that he adopted the late romantic orchestral sound of composers such as Mahler, including most obviously the use of fanfares and marches.

There is no doubt that Mahler was musically the linchpin between the 19th and 20th centuries, at the pinnacle of the romantic era, yet setting the scene for many modernmovements and styles. Although generally not understood in his lifetime, his music now receives the recognition it deserves.

“thrice homeless, as a native of Bohemia in Austria, as an Austrian among Germans, as a Jew throughout the world—always an intruder, never welcomed” (Alma Mahler, Memories and Letters 109; original; see map).

See Steinberg’s compelling argument that Mahler’s conversion resulted from his considered choice, however politically expedient it might also have been. Steinberg sees the decision to convert or not, for some Jews of Mahler’s generation (including two others we have here raised as points of comparison for Mahler, Freud and Herzl) as “a dimension of [his] work and its deepening intellectual and political orientation” (17). A telling anecdote recounted by Magnus Dawison (Davidsohn), a future Berlin cantor who sang in Mahler’s 1899 productions of Beethoven’s Ninth and Wagner’s Lohengrin, implies that the basis of Mahler’s conversion rested on his belief that one had to renounce a narrow musical practice in order to embrace a wider one, even as it poignantly reveals a continued, largely untapped connection to what he had renounced. Thus, after hearing of Dawison’s cantorial ambitions, Mahler replied, “But then you would have been lost to the world of art!”; yet he was soon improvising on remembered synagogue melodies for a spellbound Dawison (La Grange, Gustav Mahler 172–174).

To the Editor:

Gustav Mahler, devout Christian? Yes, insists Nancy Raabe in her provocative but misleading article [”Mahler’s Testament to the Abiding Unity of God and Nature,” Aug. 1]. Complaining that ”[m]uch has been made over the years of Jewish influences in Mahler’s music,” Ms. Raabe takes meager evidence out of context as strong proof of what she terms ”the composer’s allegiance to the Christian faith.”

Central to her argument are indications that Mahler, at the time of the creation of the vast Third Symphony, had in mind Jesus and his sufferings, with which Mahler, the possessed struggling artist, vividly identified.

But in writing about Mahler’s spiritual affinities, Ms. Raabe fails to inform her readers that Mahler was born a Jew, raised as a Jew and suffered intensely from anti-Semitism.

A pronounced theme repeated from his early masterworks like the ”Songs of a Wayfarer” and the Symphony No. 1 to the final ”Das Lied von der Erde” — the theme of homeless wandering — is the earmark of the Diaspora Jews and the foundation for the modern Zionism of Mahler’s great Viennese Jewish contemporary, Theodor Herzl. Mahler himself frequently compared himself to Ahasuerus, the Wandering Jew, often tormented by his vision in terrifying nightmares.

It is particularly poor salesmanship for Ms. Raabe to cite Mahler’s supposed ”conversion” from Judaism to Catholicism. In both law and common understanding, a choice made under duress is discounted as lacking in free will. Mahler converted as a mere formality under compulsion of a bigoted law that barred Jews from directorship of the Vienna Hofoper.

Mahler himself joked about the conversion with his Jewish friends, and, no doubt, would view with bitter amusement the obtuseness of Ms. Raabe’s understanding of the cruel choice forced on him: either convert to Christianity or forfeit the professional post for which you are supremely destined.

When Mahler was asked why he never composed a Mass, he answered bluntly that he could never, with any degree of artistic or spiritual integrity, voice the Credo. He was a confirmed agnostic, a doubter and seeker, never a soul at rest or at peace.

JOEL MARTEL

New York

Lebrecht

But he is pandering unnecessarily. The truth of Mahler’s complicated life is more interesting, and more stirring, than Lebrecht’s attempts to cast him as an artistic superhero and a Jewish victim. Consider the case of Mahler’s conversion to Christianity, forced on him as a condition of his appointment in 1897 as Director of the State Opera in Vienna. Mahler resented the obligation, and was annoyed at the dishonesty of it. Lebrecht tells the story this way (citing the conductor Bruno Walter and the Austrian music critic Ludwig Karpath):

He is the most reluctant, the most resentful, of converts. “I had to go through it,” he tells Walter. “This action,” he informs Karpath, “which I took out of self-preservation, and which I was fully prepared to take, cost me a great deal.” He tells a Hamburg writer: “I’ve changed my coat.” There is no false piety here, no pretense. Mahler is letting it be known for the record that he is a forced convert, one whose Jewish pride is undiminished, his essence unchanged.

And here is a fuller excerpt of the letter to Karpath, cited in Henry Louis de la Grange’s epic four-volume biography (with references to Mahler’s pre-Vienna post in Hamburg where Bernhard Pollini was manager of the opera):

“Do you know what particularly offends and annoys me? The fact that it was impossible to occupy an official post without being baptized. This is something I have never been prepared to accept. Of course it is untrue to say that I was baptized only when the opportunity arose for my engagement in Vienna—I was baptized years before. In fact it was my longing to escape from the hell of Hamburg under Pollini that prompted me to contemplate the idea of leaving the Jewish community. That is the humiliating part of it. I do not deny that it cost me a great effort, indeed one could say it was an instinct for self-survival that prompted me to such an action. Inwardly I was not averse to the idea at all.”

Lebrecht is too selective in his interpretation, and does not adequately confront the ambiguity of that last line: “Inwardly I was not averse to the idea at all.” Mahler’s conversion had none of the drama of Heine’s, it was a ticket to employment, not a “passport to Western civilization.” And Christianity had an aesthetic resonance for Mahler it never had for Heine.

http://soar.wichita.edu/bitstream/handle/10057/2016/t08051.pdf

http://soar.wichita.edu/bitstream/handle/10057/2016/t08051.pdf

Mahler‟s biographers cannot entirely be blamed for their secular treatment of this sacred event because Mahler himself did not actively participate in any organized religion in his adult life, although he is tied to his Jewish heritage even to the present day. The reason for this is explained by what makes Judaism unique among the world‟s religions: that “Jewish identity… was a matter of birth, race, and nation, as well as faith.”2 Therefore, Judaism was a label one carried based on certain social stereotypes, both including and regardless of religious belief.3

Mahler did not hide his background, but he realized that it did stand in the way of his ambition to be appointed director of the Vienna Court Opera. Fortunately for Mahler, the acceptable solution was conversion to the religion practiced by the state. In hindsight, the timing seems quite convenient, his baptism in February 1897 and the appointment to his most desired position not two months later, as well as a bit insincere. So the issue is glossed over by Henry-Louis de La Grange, Michael Kennedy and Norman Lebrecht, explaining it as a career move intended to keep the political harmony in Vienna.

1 Norman Lebrecht, Mahler Remembered (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1987) p. ix.
2 Leon Botstein, “Gustav Mahler‟s Vienna,” The Mahler Companion (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999) p.

21.
3 Talia Pecker Berio notes that “one can barely suggest a definition of a Jew, let alone Judaism….” in her essay

“Mahler‟s Jewish Parable” found in Karen Painter, ed., Mahler and His World (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2002) p. 89.

1

Without a doubt, Henry-Louis de La Grange writes the most comprehensive study on Mahler.4 Even in this most detailed biography, Mahler‟s conversion and baptism account for no more than three paragraphs, one of which is in the endnotes. What we learn in those paragraphs is that the conversion was an inadvertent result of Mahler‟s relationship with Anna von Mildenburg, of whose influence on the matter La Grange describes as “determinative.” As for the specifics of the event, “his baptism took place on February 23, 1897, in the Kleine Michaelskirche in the Sankt Angar district of Hamburg….”5 It was performed by a vicar by the name of Swider, and his godfather was a man named Theodor Meynberg. The date is also recorded in Vienna at the Church of St. Carlo Borromeo, where he married Alma Schindler in March 1902.6 After providing the details, La Grange then quotes Mahler writing to music critic Ludwig Karpath (1866-1936), as saying “I do not hide the truth from you when I say that this action, which I took from an instinct of self-preservation and which I was fully disposed to take, cost me a great deal.”7

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eaMichael Kennedy, writing for Oxford University’s Master Musicians Series, follows La Grange‟s lead down to the same quote from the letter to Karpath and also categorizes Mahler’s conversion as a career move. However, he does go on to argue that a theory of Leonard Bernstein’s, that what cost Mahler so much was being “ravaged by guilt” for turning away from Judaism, seems highly unlikely and cannot be substantiated.8 Both La Grange and Kennedy allude to a hidden truth about Mahler’s conversion: that it was required to comply with the unwritten rule in Viennese society, was treated as such by Mahler, and that despite Mahler’s

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17 May 1901 “Passover Plot” author born #otdimjh

17 May 1901 Birth of Hugh Schonfield, author of “History of Jewish Christianity” and “The Passover Plot” #otdimjh

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Hugh Schonfield, “an independent Jewish historian of the Nazarene Faith”[1] was theenfant terrible of the Hebrew Christian movement of the 20th century.

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A pioneering researcher in the history of Jewish Christianity and founding member of the International Hebrew Christian Alliance (IHCA)[2], his gifts as scholar, writer and visionary thinker made a significant contribution to Hebrew Christian thought and identity.

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As evidence of his heterodox views emerged he was excluded from IHCA membership, and his talents were employed elsewhere, in the cause of his own particular brand of biblical scholarship and the search for world peace.

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In a series of reconstructions of the life of Jesus and the early church he proposed sensationalist versions of events which found little acceptance in academic circles but were widely canvassed in the popular press.

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His innovative editions and translations of Jewish and Christian works such as the Tol’dot Yeshu,[3] while putting for the first time important materials before the general public, were marred by the imposition of his own agenda.

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His History of Jewish Christianity (HJC)[4] remains a significant work chronicling the forerunners and foundations of the modern Messianic movement.

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Much can be gained from a study of Schonfield’s life and work, especially as these impinge on the task of developing coherent Messianic Jewish theology for today.

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Prayer and Reflection: There is much for Messianic Jews to learn from the life and work of High Schonfield. He was a gifted but unorthodox scholar, a visionary who foresaw the rise of the Messianic movement, but someone whose own personal spiritual insights isolated them from the Hebrew Christian movement and led them to follow a path tinged with other elements. Yet he remained a kind and gracious man, and his writings continue to merit serious, but critical, study. His unorthodox views on the Trinity, and the nature of God, inevitably led to his exclusion from the mainstream Hebrew Christian movement, but his path might have been different with more careful monitoring, mentoring and method in his research.

Lord, teach us to serve you with all our heart, soul, strength and mind. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

Hugh Joseph Schonfield (London, 17 May 1901 – January 24, 1988, London)

Richard Harvey, Passing over the Plot? The Life and Work of Hugh Schonfield [p35]

Owen Power, Hugh Schonfield: A Case Study of Complex Jewish Identities

https://archive.org/details/TheHistoryOfJewishChristianity

http://caspari.com/new/images/stories/archives/Mishkan/mishkan37.pdf

http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/1507528051/wwwgandhicc01-21

with several inaccuracies – caveat lector

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_J._Schonfield

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O6—itsv98

Preface to Owen Power, Hugh Schonfield: A Case Study of Complex Jewish Identities

I first met Hugh Schonfield at a meeting of the local synagogue to which my great aunt had invited me. There he spoke about his latest book, a study of the life of Jesus, to the somewhat bemused Rabbi and synagogue members. At the end of the meeting my great-aunt was curious about Schonfield’s unorthodox but sympathetic historical reconstruction of the life of Jesus. “Isn’t he one of yours?” she asked, knowing of my own beliefs as a Messianic Jew.

Owen Power has made a pioneering contribution to the study of Hugh Schonfield, a complex personality and maverick scholar, whose writings and activities have earned him a significant but underestimated place in 20th century religious thought. John Lennon referenced his work when charting the rise of the Beatles. His book “The Passover Plot” sold millions of copies. His ideas influenced successive generations of Jewish, Christian and Messianic Jewish thinkers. But his thought and the context in which it emerged remains a mystery which this important study explores and explains.

Readers will find Power’s study invaluable in understanding the times in which Schonfield lived and wrote. He wrote in response to the threat of anti-Semitism in Europe, the position of the Jewish people in the United Kingdom, the birth of the modern Hebrew Christian (Messianic Jewish) movement and the utopian idealism of various political movements. These all combined with the zeitgeist of the 1920s and 1930s in the midst of a world in crisis. Political, social and religious concerns were combined in Schonfield’s unique and eclectic blend of philosophy and spirituality. His skills as a writer, publicist and political activist brought a small coterie of followers together that continues to this day in the Mondcitivan movement, for which he was nominated (unsuccessfully) to receive the Nobel prize. Power’s study takes on these diverse and contradictory aspects of his career, and sets them in the context of the intellectual history of the 20th century.

[1] Saints against Caesar (SAC) (London: Macdonald, 1948), vii.

[2] The IHCA was renamed the International Messianic Jewish Alliance (IMJA) in 1992.

[3] According to the Hebrews, a new translation of the Jewish Life of Jesus (the Toldoth Jeshu) (London: Duckworth, 1937)

[4] London: Duckworth, 1936; Manna Books, 1995

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16 May 1799 Alexander McCaul born #otdimjh

16 May 1799 Birth of Alexander McCaul, scholar, evangelist and author of “The Old Paths” #otdimjh

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McCaul, the son of Alexander McCaul (a cordwainer) was born to a Protestant family in Dublin, 16 May 1799. He was educated at a private school, and entering Trinity College, Dublin, 3 October 1814, graduated B.A. 1819, and proceeded M.A. 1831; he was created D.D. in 1837. He was for some time tutor to the Earl of Rosse, and then, was sent in 1821 to Poland as a missionary, by the London Society for Promoting Christianity among the Jews.

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McCaul studied Hebrew and German at Warsaw, and at the end of 1822 went to St. Petersburg, where he was received by Alexander I of Russia. Returning to England, he was ordained and served the curacy of Huntley, near Gloucester, where he became close to Samuel Roffey Maitland. In 1823 he married and returned to Poland, living at Warsaw as head of the mission to the Jews, and English chaplain, until 1830. He was supported by the Grand Duke Constantine, but had disputes with the Lutheran congregations. Moving to Berlin, where he was befriended by George Henry Rose, the English ambassador, and by the Crown Prince of Prussia, who had known him at Warsaw.

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To improve his health McCaul visited Ireland, and returned for a short time to Poland in 1832. Deciding to settle in London, he took up residence in Palestine Place, Cambridge Road and actively supported the London Society. He assisted in founding the Jews’ Operatives Converts Institution, and in 1837 started the publication of Old Paths, a weekly pamphlet on Jewish ritual, which continued for sixty weeks.

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In 1840 McCaul was appointed principal of the Hebrew college founded by the London Society; and in the summer of 1841, through Frederick William IV of Prussia, he was offered the bishopric of Jerusalem, but declined it because he thought it would be better held by one who had been a Jew. His friend Michael Solomon Alexander was appointed, and McCaul succeeded Alexander as professor of Hebrew and rabbinical literature at King’s College, London. In 1846 he was also elected to the chair of divinity.

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In 1843 McCaul was appointed rector of St James Duke’s Place, London. In 1845 he became prebendary of St Paul’s Cathedral, and in 1847 declined Archbishop William Howley’s offer of one of the new colonial bishoprics. In 1850 he became rector of the united parish of St Magnus-the-Martyr. When the sittings of Convocation were revived in 1852, McCaul was elected proctor for the London clergy, and represented them for the rest of his life. At first strongly opposed to the revival of the ancient powers of convocation, he modified his views and worked with the High Church party, opposing the relaxation of the subscription to the 39 articles.

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McCaul died at the rectory, St Magnus-the-Martyr, London Bridge, on 13 November 1863, and was buried at Ilford, Essex.

Reflection and Prayer: McCaul’s life and legacy loom large over the history of th London Society (CMJ), the Jerusalem Bishopric, and the development of apologetic literature. McCaul himself was welcomed wherever he went, and his scholarship and personal qualities won him friends everywhere. His approach and methods in the light of history seem now adversarial and unsympathetic, but his works were widely read, and challenged modern Orthodox Judaism to make appropriate responses, gave Reform Judaism a further support, and invite Messianic Jews to engage with the primary texts of Jewish tradition with warmth and sensitivity.

Thank you Lord, for this your servant. May we in our generation demonstrate similar commitment and love for your people Israel, your word revealed, and your living Word, our Messiah Yeshua. In His name we pray. Amen.

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_McCaul

http://jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/10526-mccaul-alexander

https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=aVIEAAAAQAAJ&redir_esc=y

https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=P-Y7AQAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false

https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=RbUCAAAAQAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false

English Christian missionary and author; born at Dublin May 16, 1799; died at London Nov. 13, 1863. He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin. Becoming interested in the Jews, he was sent as a missionary to Poland in 1821, where he studied Hebrew and German at Warsaw. In 1822 he went to interview the Czar in regard to the conversion of the Jews. He continued to live at Warsaw for ten years, interesting the grand duke Constantine, the crown prince of Prussia, and Sir Henry Rose in his work. In 1837 he produced an elaborate attack upon Jewish legalism under the title “Old Paths”; it was published weekly for over a year. This created considerable interest among Jews, and was translated into several languages, including Hebrew (“Netibot ‘Olam”). An answer in Hebrew (“Netibot Emet”), was published by Judah Middleman in 1847, a translation by Stanislaz Hoga having appeared in the preceding year. McCaul wrote vigorously against the blood accusation, and refused the Protestant bishopric of Jerusalem, on the ground that it should be held by a Jew by birth, recommending M. S. Alexander for that post. He became professor of Hebrew and rabbinical literature at King’s College, London.

Bibliography:

  • The Guardian (London), Nov. 18, 1863;
  • Nat. Biog.
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15 May 1948 Israel receives Messianic Jews #otdimjh

15 May 1948 Fledgling State of Israel now home to Messianic Jews #otdimjh

From the article “Hebrew Christianity in the Holy Land from 1948 to the Present” by  Ole Chr. M. Kvarme [p.43ff, footnotes omitted]:

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A celebratory crowd outside the Tel Aviv Museum to hear the Declaration

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David Ben-Gurion declaring independence beneath a large portrait of Theodor Herzl, founder of modern Zionism

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Ben Gurion (Left) Signing the Declaration of Independence held by Moshe Sharet

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David Ben-Gurion declaring independence beneath a large portrait of Theodor Herzl, founder of modern Zionism

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The whole article is available online here:

Prayer: Thank you Lord for establishing the Messianic movement in Israel. From small beginnings in 1948 it has grown to be estimated in the tens of thousands, There is still a long way to go, but we pray for your renewing and restoring power among your people Israel, to restore the remnant and return the exiles. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://caspari.com/new/images/stories/archives/Mishkan/mishkan28.pdf

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