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

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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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Alma Schindler, who married Mahler in 1902 (from 1902, possibly earlier)

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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The Vienna Hofoper (now Staatsoper), pictured in 1898 during Mahler’s conductorship

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 conducting style, 1901, caricatured in the humorous magazine Fliegende Blätter

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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Mahler’s grave in the Grinzing cemetery, Vienna

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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Silhouette by Otto Böhler

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

Click to access 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.

Click to access 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

Ea

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 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 the enfant 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 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.

old-paths

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 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.

Click to access mishkan28.pdf

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14 May 1885 Birth of Otto Klemperer, great conductor of the 20th century #otdimjh

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Otto Klemperer (14 May 1885 – 6 July 1973) was a German conductor and composer. He is widely regarded as one of the leading conductors of the 20th century.

Klemperer was born on 14 May 1885 in Breslau. Although the boy first wanted to be an actor rather than a musician, the aid of a wealthy family member allowed him to pursue a musical education. With the support of his parents, he dropped out of secondary school to study music in Frankfurt, several years later moving to Berlin to continue his studies at the conservatory.

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Otto Klemperer dirigiert, 1936

In 1905 he began a period of study with Hans Pfitzner. At the beginning of the war in 1914, he received his first big break as the temporary replacement for Pfitzner as the opera director for the city of Strasbourg. By the end of the war, with the defeat of Germany and the drama of the November Revolution, Klemperer, increasingly radicalised, had become a faithful supporter of the new Weimar Republic. He moved to Cologne, and formally converted to Catholicism in 1919.

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Portrait of Klemperer by Soshana, 1945 

In the mid-1920s he returned to Berlin, a centre of musical innovation in Weimar Germany. It was there that he held probably his most significant post, as conductor of the Kroll Opera, where he was a vocal advocate of composers like Ernst Krenek, Kurt Weill and Schoenberg. However, the increasingly conservative atmosphere of Germany, along with the severe economic depression, claimed him as an early victim, and he lost his position at the Kroll in 1931. Instead, he was offered a position working at the Prussian State Opera, where he was conducting when Hitler came to power.

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Despite the response to his production of Wagner’s Tannhäuser in early 1933, Klemperer initially did not want to leave Germany, and hoped that his fame and apolitical stance would protect him. In April 1933, however, he fled to Austria, leaving his wife and children behind, to follow when he had secured a permanent residence. Unlike many of his fellow German-Jewish refugees, Klemperer was to establish a successful musical career in exile. Upon arrival in the United States, where he had already toured successfully in the 1920s, he was offered the position of musical director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra.

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In 1939 he underwent an operation for a brain tumour, which left him with facial paralysis and worsened his emotional problems. He was so incapacitated that he ceased to conduct for several years. After the war, however, he was to resume an impressive international musical career. He became known as one of the best living conductors of the classical German repertoire, particularly of works of the Viennese school and his early idol, Mahler. In later life he reverted to Judaism in the 1960s, and became a citizen of the State of Israel in 1970. The conductor died in Zurich in July 1973, at the age of 88. He was buried in the Jewish cemetery in Zurich.

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Prayer: Thank you Lord for this man and the beautiful music he produced. Despite his emotional and personal struggles, he articulated the beauty of God through his musical gifts, and expressed the faith you gave him as a Jew, a Catholic, and a human being caught up in the struggles of life. Even as he brought alive great works of music such as Bach’s St Matthew Passion that proclaim your glory, help us to live lives of faith, worship and devotion to you. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://holocaustmusic.ort.org/politics-and-propaganda/third-reich/klemperer-otto/

http://www.bach-cantatas.com/Vocal/BWV244-Klemperer.htm

https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=WVTSGoGfmuMC&pg=PA134&hl=en#v=onepage&q&f=false

http://www.jta.org/1973/07/10/archive/otto-klemperer-to-be-buried-in-zurichs-jewish-cemetery

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13 May 1782 Death of Joshua ben Abraham Herschel #otdimjh

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Portrait of Friedrich Albrecht Augusti (prop. Joshua Ben Abraham Herschel)

Joshua ben Abraham Herschel (aka Friedrich Albrecht Augusti), was born in the middle of the seventeenth century and  died at Prostnitz at the beginning of the eighteenth century. He was baptized in 1674 at Strassburg, having formerly been the Chazzan (Cantor/Precentor) at Bruchsal. After having occupied for twenty years the chair of Semitics at the university of Leipzig, he retired to Prostnitz. [Bernstein]

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Augusti, Friedrich Albrech (originally Joshua ben-Abraham Herschel), a Lutheran minister of Germany , was born June 30,1691, at Frankfort-on-the-Oder. His Jewish parents educated him according to their custom. While yet a boy, he expressed a desire to go to Jerusalem.

At that time a man by the name of Jecuthiel had come to Frankfort with a view of collecting money for his coreligionists in the Holy Land, who urged the boy’s parents not to oppose his wishes. Permission having been granted, they both started for the Holy Land, but on the way our young traveller was attacked by a gang of Tartar robbers and made a slave.

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A coreligionist from Podolia redeemed him and set him free. From Smyrna he went to Poland, and continued his studies at Cracow and Prague. He returned to Frankfort before he undertook a journey to Italy; but in Sandershausen, on. the night of Nov. 25, 1720, he was maltreated by a gang of robbers who had broken into the house in which he resided. On the following morning he was found, to all appearance, lifeless. He recovered, however, and during his continued stay at Sandershausen, he became acquainted with the superintendent of that place, the. Rev. Dr. Reinhard, who finally became the instrument of leading Joshua to Christ.

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On Christmas day, 1732, he was baptized under his new Christian name, his sponsors being the reigning princess and the prince Augustus of Schwartzburg-Sondershausen, the duke of Saxe-Gotha, the duchess of Brunswick-Wonlfenbuttel, and the princess palatine Charlotte Christina. After his baptism, he decided on the study of divinity. He entered the gymnasium at Gotha, and in 1727 he commenced his theological studies at Jena and Leipsig. In 1729 he was appointed collaborator at the gymnasium in Gotha, and in 1734 minister of the parish of Eschberge, in the duchy of Saxe-Gotha, where he preached until his death, May 13,1782. The famous theologian Johann Christian Wilhelm Augusti was his grandson.

Prayer: Thank you for this much travelled and learned Jewish believer in Yeshua, whose adventures and writings are fascinating to us today. May our lives be as significant in your purposes for your people Israel and all nations. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

Auguhsti, Friedrich ( Dt.-Jewish theologian;. student of Jewish Theology in Cracow.. 1719 Lecturer in Prague; 1720 rabbi in Sondershausen, baptized in 1722 there Evangel;. students at the high school Gotha; student in Jena and Leipzig; 1730 high school teacher in Gotha, 1734 Vicar and Pastor in 1739 Eschenbergen; 1754 Dr. phil hc. ).

Christiani’s works comprise the following, all published at Leipzig.

(1) “Zebah Pesah” (The sacrifice of Easter), an account of the Jewish celebration of Easter in the time of Jesus, and at the present.

(2) “Seudath Purim” (The meal of Purim), 1677, a description of Jewish fasting and feasting.

(3) “Zahakan Melumad Umethareth” (The Scholarly Gambler repenting) 1683, a German translation of the work of Leon of Modena on gambling. (4) “Abravanel’s Commentary on the first prophets, with a Latin index,” 1686.

(5) “The text of Jonah with the Targum Massorah and the commentaries of Rashi, Ibn Ezra, Kimchi and Abravanel, and a Hebrew Latin Vocabulary,” 1683.

(6) “Iggereth” (Letter) 1676, The Epistle of St. Paul to the Hebrews, translated from the Greek into Hebrew.

(7) “Traktat von dem Glauben und Unglauben der Juden,” 1713.

http://www.unz.org/Pub/AugustiFriedrich-1842?View=OL_1

http://www.portraitindex.de/documents/obj/34002836

http://www.biblicalcyclopedia.com/A/augusti-friedrich-albrech.html

http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/2135-augusti-friedrich-albrecht

https://archive.org/details/lifeoffriedricha00auguiala

Aungusti wrote Diss. de Adventus Christi Necessitate (Lips. 1794): — Aphorismi de Studiis Juda orum Modiernis (Goth. 1731):-Das Geheimniss des Sambuthion (Erfut, 1748): — Nachrichte der Karaiten (ibid. 1752): — Dissertationes Historicophilosoph.’ (ibid. 1753). His grandson was the famous theologian Johann Christian Wilhelm Augusti.- The Life of Augusti has repeatedly been written by several writers and published in the form of a tract. See Delitzsch, Saat auf Hoofnung (1866); Axenfeld, Leben von den Todten (Barmen, 1874) ; The Life of Friedrich Albrecht Augusti (transl. by Macintosh, Lond. 1867); Barber, Redemption in Israel (ibid. 1844), p. 78 sq. (B. P.)

Augusti published several works in Latin and German, of which “Das Geheimniss des Sambathian” (The Mystery of the Sambathian), the fabulous river mentioned in Talmudic literature, which casts stones during six days of the week and rests on Saturday, is probably the most curious. His work on the Karaites, mentioned by Fürst in his “Geschichte des Karäerthums,” vol. iii. 66, 67, of which the full title is “Gründliche Nachrichten von den Karaiten, Ihre Glaubens-Lehren, Sitten und Kirchen-Gebräuche” (Erfurt, 1752), is full of inaccuracies and extravagant statements. Baumgarten, in his “Nachrichten von MerkwürdigenBüchern,” vol. i. 341-351, exposes many of these, and justly refuses to believe Augusti’s claim that his sources were rare manuscripts which, after he had used them, were partly burned and partly stolen, and of which no duplicates remained. The best proof of his negligence or ignorance of the subject is that he wholly ignores the  (Dod Mordecai), the full description of the Karaites and Karaism which was written by the Karaite Mordecai ben Nissim, at the end of the seventeenth century for Prof. Jacob Trigland of Leyden, and published with a Latin translation with Trigland’s “De Karæis” by Johann Christian Wolf in 1714. Augusti also confuses Judah ben Tabbai, who lived at least a century before the common era, with Judah ha-Nasi, who flourished about three hundred years later.

The “Life of Augusti,” by an anonymous author, published in 1751 by Weber, is also reviewed and severely criticized by Baumgarten in the volume cited above (pp. 337-340). The Christian critic displays sufficient familiarity with Jewish affairs and customs to disprove the biographer’s claim that Augusti, before his conversion, was a rabbi at Sondershausen, and proves that in reality he was a school-master and possibly a slaughterer of animals or “shoḥet.” Several other biographies of Augusti were written, mostly for missionary purposes, one translated into English by Macintosh, London, 1867.

Bibliography:

  • Delitzsch, in Saat auf Hoffnung, 1866;
  • McClintock and Strong, Cyc. Supplement.
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12 May 1920 Birth of Hugh William Sebag-Montefiore, Bishop and Jewish Christian #otdimjh

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Hugh William Montefiore (born Hugh William Sebag-Montefiore; London, 12 May 1920 – 13 May 2005) was Bishop of Kingston from 1970 to 1978 and Bishop of Birmingham from 1977 to 1987.

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He was educated at Rugby School, where he underwent a sudden conversion to Anglican Christianity. He then served in World War II and gained the rank of Captain in the service of the Royal Artillery, in the Royal Buckinghamshire Yeomanry. Afterwards he graduated from St John’s College, Oxford, with a Master of Arts (MA) in 1947, legally changing his name by Deed Poll on 7 January of that year, and from Westcott House, Cambridge.

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Montefiore family crest

He was ordained as a Deacon in 1949 and became the Dean of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he was a University Lecturer in Divinity. He graduated also from St John’s College, Oxford University, in 1963 with a Bachelor of Divinity (BD).

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He was Vicar of the Great St Mary’s, Cambridge, from 1963 to 1970, Bishop of Kingston-upon-Thames from 1970 to 1978 — he was consecrated at Southwark Cathedral on Michaelmas day (29 September) 1970 — and Bishop of Birmingham from 1977 to 1987.

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Montefiore was the author of more than 20 books, including The Probability of God (1985), Christianity and Politics (1990), Credible Christianity (1993), On Being a Jewish Christian (1998) and The Paranormal: A Bishop Investigates (2002). He was a Friends of the Earth trustee for two decades, but was forced to resign in 2004 after expressing support for nuclear power as a means to achieve climate change mitigation.

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Here is my review of On Being a Jewish Christian (Hodder and Stoughton, £7.99, 195 pages, 1998)

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Montefiore is an Anglican Bishop from a distinguished Anglo-Jewish family. He wears his heart on his sleeve as he explores some of the blessings and problems of one who claims to be both fully Jewish and fully Christian.

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Hugh Montefiore had a powerful religious experience as a young man, seeing a vision of Jesus dressed in white and saying “Follow me.” This led Montefiore into the Anglican ministry, first as a don in Cambridge, and then as a senior if controversial bishop. Thinking that he is “now too old to cause trouble” he has put pen to paper to try to unravel some of the theological and personal issues that arise from his decision. The book is a well-written exploration of two thousand years of Jewish-Christian relations, bringing an insightful and heartfelt plea to Christians to be more understanding of the Jewish people, and to Jewish people to consider afresh the message and person of Jesus.

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Montefiore does not duck the difficult issues such as the eternal fate of those who perished in the Holocaust, the dilemma of the modern State of Israel, and the tension many Christians feel between dialogue and evangelism. Nor is he reticent in giving his own views, which, even though you may not agree with them, make an important contribution from an often neglected perspective, that of a Jewish Christian.

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Montefiore traces the roots of anti-Semitism to the New Testament itself. He sees the Johannine condemnation of “the Jews” not as an inner-Jewish debate, but as did his cousin, Claude Montefiore, the evidence of bitter hatred between Jews and Christians. Likewise he evaluates Paul’s argument in Romans 9-11 as “dangerously flawed.” In all this he adopts the liberal and critical agenda that discredits the New Testament by misreading its context. Montefiore seems out of touch with more recent scholarship such as Stephen Motyer’s recent “Your Father the Devil?” (Paternoster 1997) which convincingly argues that this is a wrong reading of the material, despite the polemical purposes it was made to serve by later Church Fathers.

Montefiore also reveals his sense of personal identity, and the perceptive reader will find much on which to ponder. He is particularly stimulating on the question of Messianic Congregations, and Messianic Judaism. The Bishop has mixed feelings about this more recent expression of what he himself has tried to live out, seeing both the strengths and weaknesses of the movement, and preferring to identify with it in Israel, but not in the UK. He prefers, as do many of the previous generation of Jewish believers in Jesus, to emphasise that he is a Christian who happens to be Jewish. The newer emphasis of Messianic Judaism, whilst not denying the primacy of faith in Christ and commitment to the universal church, tries to communicate this faith in terms more appropriate to the Jewish community, contextualising belief in Jesus as the Messiah within a Jewish perspective. Hence the term “Messianic Judaism”, which raises the question of an integrated Jewish form of Christianity and Christian form of Judaism.

We live in postmodern times, we are told, yet the struggles each of us face to be loyal to our roles and publics are tellingly illustrated by Montefiore’s feelings as an “outsider” in the Passover celebrations his relatives invite him to, and his ambivalence towards his people in Israel. His task is to recognise the hostilities and tensions between the two faiths, and act as a peace-maker and bridge-builder between the two communities. For him witness must be by deed rather than word, and he approves of the Archbishop of Canterbury’s refusal to accept the patronage of the Church’s Ministry among the Jewish People (CMJ), one of the most unfortunate beginnings to the Decade of Evangelism. His book receives the commendation of the Chairman of the Council of Christians and Jews, but Montefiore himself recognises the unfairness of the exclusion of Jewish Christians like himself from membership of CCJ and the dialogue process.

Montefiore’s book is well worth reading. Whilst he clearly identifies as a “Jewish Christian” rather than a “Messianic Jew”, his profound scholarship, thoughtful and reflective questions on Jewish and Christian identity, and his clear and luminous writing, challenge and delight the attentive reader. Anyone wanting to understand the issues involved in Jewish-Christian relations today will find it, like the Bishop himself, personal, informative and challenging.

Memorial_to_Hugh_William_Montefiore_in_Birmingham_Cathedral

Prayer: Thank you Lord for the life, faith and ministry of Hugh Montefiore, a leading figure in the Church of England from a distinguished Jewish family. Help us, like him, to integrate the identity you give us as Jewish followers of the Jewish Messiah in a way that shows the love, character and mind of Yeshua. In his name we pray. Amen.

http://www.lcje.net/reviews.html#harvey

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

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11 May 1879 Death of Samuel Gobat, Bishop of Jerusalem #otdimjh

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Samuel Gobat (26 January 1799 – 11 May 1879), was a Swiss Lutheran who became an Anglican missionary in Africa and was the Protestant Bishop of Jerusalem from 1846 until his death.

Born to a Lutheran family in Crémine, Bern, Switzerland, Gobat studied at the Basel Mission Institute, the Missionary Institute in Paris, and the CMS training institution in Islington (London), England. Ordained in the Lutheran church, he nevertheless volunteered for service with the CMS. During six years of service in Abyssinia (Ethiopia), broken by a short stint in Europe from 1833 to 1834, during which he married Maria Zellerin, Gobat worked energetically and to some degree successfully at building rapport with the Orthodox Coptic Church.

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In 1836 he was forced by poor health to return to Europe. He was subsequently sent to Malta, where, between 1839 and 1845, he supervised the translation of the Bible into Arabic and served as vice-president of the Malta Protestant College. In 1846 he was nominated by King Friedrich Wilhelm IV of Prussia to succeed the recently deceased bishop of Jerusalem. Until his death (in Jerusalem), Gobat was notable for the energetic practicality and consummate Christian diplomacy that marked his fulfillment of this difficult and frequently exasperating role. In addition to his several publications cited below, and the Arabic translation of the Bible mentioned above, Gobat left behind thirty-seven Palestinian schools with a combined enrollment of 1,400 students, and twelve indigenous churches. A nephew of Bishop Gobat, Charles Albert Gobat, received the Nobel Peace Prize 1902.

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Gobat’s policy in Jerusalem was to focus on the indigenous Arab Christians, as mission to Jews and Muslims became problematic. Charlotte van der Leest explains in her doctoral thesis on Gobat:

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[p.110, footnotes omitted] In his missionary work Gobat soon ran into difficulties concerning the conversion of the Jews. Jews who converted to Christianity lost their jobs and became the target of the mockery and disdain of their families and friends. This was a problem, as the majority was very poor and would become dependent on alms.53 From Gobat’s annual letter for 1848 it appears that he tried to ‘solve’ this difficulty by changing the mission’s policy regarding the conversion of Jewish people. He now formulated the condition that all Jews who were serious about their conversion and wanted to be baptised should be willing to learn a trade, if they were able to work. As a true Evangelical, Gobat linked to baptisms a “true conversion of the heart”; people’s readiness to learn a craft would be proof of their sincerity. Furthermore, it was a pragmatic solution, making Jewish converts self-supporting and less dependent on alms. For this reason Gobat was glad that the House of Industry was reopened after a period of closure.

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Because of his stance on the issue of Jewish converts, Gobat was reproached more than once in LJS circles with having no heart for the Jews because he did not share the millenarian “poetical hopes”, as he himself called it, for a rapid conversion of the people of Israel. He dissociated himself from all efforts especially directed at the Jews without proclaiming the Gospel to them. He did not agree with the underlying idea that the [111] return of the Jews in Palestine, their establishment, and the restoration of the temple would happen before they would recognize Jesus as their Messiah.

It comes as no surprise that the cooperation between the bishopric and the LJS was not as close during the Gobat years as it was during his predecessor’s episcopate, in which the mission of the LJS and the bishopric seemed to be united. As the memorandum in favour of the LJS church in Jerusalem in 1845 made clear, the mission to the Jews was important to many people in Britain. Consequently, Gobat’s attitude towards the LJS and its mission to the Jews, together with the fact that he did not share the millenarian expectations of many regarding the restoration of the Jews in Palestine, evoked much criticism from LJS members and supporters in Britain.

Gobat’s distancing himself from the mission among the Jews was linked to his focus on other Christians. Although the “Statement of Proceedings” prohibited the Protestant bishop from interfering in the affairs of Christian denominations, Gobat’s autobiography and his (annual) letters demonstrate that his missionary activities were mainly directed towards these denominations. He believed that it was not God’s will to restrict the mission to Jews only. With an appeal to the apostle Paul he said that he considered it his duty to direct his energies not only towards the Jews, but also towards the Greeks, Barbarians, ‘Papists’, Armenians, the Turks etcetera.

Moreover, he realised that the conversion of the Jews was not the real mission object of his Prussian patrons. This extension of the focus of the bishopric is already reflected in Gobat’s (first) annual re- port for 1847. From this account it appears that Gobat had appointed three Bible readers, who were required to read the Bible to people from various religious and denominational backgrounds. One of them was a Greek Catholic who had not yet for- mally separated from his church, but, according to Gobat, knew and loved the ‘truth’. The other was a former Roman Catholic, and the third a converted Jew trained in Hebrew College. They read the Bible not only to Jewish people, but also to Muslims and Christians of various denominations.

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Gobat’s grave, Mount Zion cemetery

Prayer: Thank you Lord for this significant figure in the life of the church in Israel in the 19th century, and for his legacy of institutions, buildings and the people whose life he touched. In the midst of challenging political and personal circumstances he consistently lived an example of faith and service. Help us to follow in his example, wherever we may be called to serve you, and in whatever capacity. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

Conversion and Conflict in Palestine: The Missions of the Church Missionary Society and the Protestant Bishop Samuel Gobat Protestant Bishop Samuel Gobat Samuel GobatCharlotte van der Leest – 2008 ISBN 978-90-9023203-4  available here:

https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/handle/1887/12957/Thesis.pdf?sequence=1

https://archive.org/stream/samuelgobatbisho00goba#page/n7/mode/2up

Gobat, Samuel (1799-1879)

Click to access DuaneMiller-oct2012.pdf

1879: Samuel Gobat, who had been serving as the Protestant Bishop of Jerusalem since 1846, passed away.  Unlike his predecessor, Gobat refrained from trying to convert Jews and Moslems and worked among Christians.  He and his wife who had also died while living in Jerusalem are buried in Mount Zion Cemetery.

Church Missionary Society (CMS) missionary to Abyssinia

Jonathan J. Bonk, “Gobat, Samuel,” in Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions, ed. Gerald H. Anderson (New York: Macmillan Reference USA, 1998), 245.

This article is reprinted from Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions, Macmillan Reference USA, copyright © 1998 Gerald H. Anderson, by permission of Macmillan Reference USA, New York, NY. All rights reserved.

Bibliography

DIGITAL TEXTS

Art. IV.—Gobat’s Three Years’ Residence in Abyssinia.” The Theological and Literary Journal 4 no. 1 (July 1851): 134-58.

Gobat, Samuel. Journal of Three Years’ Residence in Abyssinia. Accompanied with A Biographical Sketch of Bishop Gobat by Robert Baird. New York: M. W. Dodd, 1834.

Gobat, Samuel and L. Roehrich. Samuel Gobat: His Life and His Work. A Biographical Sketch Drawn Chiefly from His Own Journals. With Preface by the Right Hon. the Earl of Shaftesbury. With Portaits and Illustrations. London: J. Nisbet, 1884. [Originally written in French by Mme. L. Roehrich. English translation made from the German ed. of 1884.]

_____. Samuel Gobat: missionnaire en Abyssinie et évêque à Jérusalem, sa vie et son oeuvre. Bale: C. F. Spittler, 1885.

Gobat, Samuel, D.D.” In Men of the Reign: A Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Persons of British and Colonial Birth Who Have Died During the Reign of Queen Victoria, edited by Thomas Humphry Ward, 355-6. London: G. Routledge and Sons, 1885.

Schäfer, Theodor. “Gobat, Samuel: Second Anglican-German Bishop in Jerusalem.” In The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing Biblical, Historical, Doctrinal, and Practical Theology and Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Biography from the Earliest Times to the Present Day, edited by Samuel Macauley Jackson, et al., 5:1. New York and London: Funk and Wagnalls Co., 1908-1912.

Stock, EugeneThe History of the Church Missionary Society: Its Environment, Its Men, and Its Work. 4 vols. London: Church Missionary Society, 1899-1916.  Volume 1Volume 2Volume 3Volume 4.

SECONDARY

“Art. IV.—Gobat’s Three Years’ Residence in Abyssinia.” The Theological and Literary Journal 4 no. 1 (July 1851): 134-58.

Baird, Robert. “A Biographical Sketch of Bishop Gobat.” In Samuel Gobat, Journal of Three Years’ Residence in Abyssinia. New York: M. W. Dodd, 1834.

Conway, John S. “The Jerusalem Bishopric: A ‘Union of Foolscap and Blotting-paper.’” Studies in Religion 7 no. 3 (1978).

“Gobat, Samuel, D.D.” In Men of the Reign: A Biographical Dictionary of Eminent Persons of British and Colonial Birth Who Have Died During the Reign of Queen Victoria, edited by Thomas Humphry Ward, 355-6. London: G. Routledge and Sons, 1885.

Kildani, Hanna. Modern Christianity in the Holy Land: Development of the Structure of Churches and the Growth of Christian Institutions in Jordan and Palestine: The Jerusalem Patriarchate in the Nineteenth Century in Light of the Ottoman Firmans and the International Relations of the Ottoman Sultanate. Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, 2010, especially pages 522-65.

Payne, Eric. Ethiopian Jews: The Story of a Mission. London: Olive Press, 1972.

Schäfer, Theodor. “Gobat, Samuel: Second Anglican-German Bishop in Jerusalem.” In The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing Biblical, Historical, Doctrinal, and Practical Theology and Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Biography from the Earliest Times to the Present Day, edited by Samuel Macauley Jackson, et al., 5:1. New York and London: Funk and Wagnalls Co., 1908-1912. Also Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1963-1967.

Stock, EugeneThe History of the Church Missionary Society: Its Environment, Its Men, and Its Work. 4 vols. London: Church Missionary Society, 1899-1916.

Stunt, Timothy C. F. From Awakening to Secession: Radical Evangelicals in Switzerland and Britain, 1815-35. Edinburgh: T & T Clark, 2000, especially “Swiss missionary recruits in London,” pages 128-33.

Tibawi, Abdul Latif. British Interest in Palestine 1800-1901: A Study of Religious and Educational Enterprise. London: Oxford University Press, 1961, pp. 237-255.

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10th May 2003 European Lutheran Commission on the Church and the Jewish People makes key recommendations #otdimjh

I am resisting the temptation to blog about today being the birthday of Karl Barth, but I think he would be in agreement with much of the statements below from theEuropean Lutheran Commission on the Church and the Jewish People (LEKKJ).

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At its annual meetings, 2001 – 2003 the European Lutheran Commission on the Church and the Jewish People (LEKKJ) studied a number of liturgical texts, and especially the prayers which have as their theme the relationship between the church and the Jewish people.

This study revealed that obscurities, misunderstandings and anti-Jewish formulations both old and new continue to be perpetrated. It demonstrates, therefore, the urgent need to devote as much care to liturgies and to liturgical texts as to other documents devoted to the subject of Judaism. Hence, the following points ought to be considered with great care –

Section I

  1. New insights have been gained by our churches; these are publicly available and ought to be used when composing the text of prayers.
  2. It is, for example, no longer possible to speak of ‘Israel’, or the ‘Jews’, as if their significance were confined to past history, when, in fact, they are of considerable significance in the present time.
  3. To whom precisely do the words ‘Israel’, ‘God’s people’, ‘Your people’, or ‘we’, refer? No ambiguity must be allowed to enter the minds of the congregation which participates in such prayers. What, for example, is meant when use is made of such expressions as ‘Your covenant’, or ‘the blessing which you have promised’, or ‘promise’? To whom do these concepts refer?
  4. The effect of the words and images used must be examined, as the danger frequently arises, when, for example, ‘Israel’ is being prayed for, that this gets associated with the state of Israel, and not with the religious concept of Judaism, although this is what was intended.
  5. Concepts and ideas which occur in both Judaism and Christianity are to be examined with a view to ascertaining whether their use carries the same meaning in both communities; for example: Are their respective eschatological expectations really identical?
  6. Is it not a fact that there are liturgies which preserve traditions hostile to the Jews? They contradict insights gained during Christian-Jewish dialogue, but continue to be handed on through the liturgical tradition. A number of more recent liturgies contain elements which, according to Lutheran official documents ought long ago to have been consigned to past history. In some churches it continues to be possible to read out Josephus’ account of the fall of Jerusalem on the 10thSunday after Trinity, which includes comments unambiguously hostile to the Jews. Or, again, some recently revised liturgies contain flagrantly unsuitable passages, designed, perhaps, to express ecumenical solidarity with the Catholic tradition, while leaving out of account their anti-Jewish potential.
  7. One problem can consist in the deliberate omission of Israel from liturgical prayers. A way of overcoming this difficulty might be to speak of God’s abiding faithfulness to his people in the Communion liturgy.
  8. It is imperative, in all services, to observe the practice of reading out at least one passage from the Hebrew Bible, i.e. our Old Testament.
  9. Under no circumstances must a reading from the Old Testament be given inferior liturgical status as against other readings.

Section II

We request the churches –

  1. when liturgies are being revised, that members of the working parties engaged in Christian-Jewishdialogue be consulted;
  2. that the persons responsible in the churches for both introductory and advanced courses of study include in their programs the criteria discussed in section I above and take into consideration the results achieved by Christian-Jewish dialogue.

Graz,Austria, 10th May 2003.

These recommendations were adopted unanimously by the LEKKJ delegates at their annual meeting for the year 2003.

Prayer: Thank you Lord for this timely reminder to rid Christian worship of anti-Jewish and anti-Semitic content. May the time soon come when the role of Yeshua as Messiah of Israel today, and the place of Messianic Jews as his disciples, is similarly recognised. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://www.sacredheart.edu/faithservice/centerforchristianandjewishunderstanding/documentsandstatements/europeanlutherancommissiononthechurchandthejewishpeoplemay102003/

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9 May 1244 Pope Innocent IV orders Louis IX of France to burn the Talmud #otdimjh

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Pope Innocent IV was born in 1195 in Genoa, Italy. He became a Catholic priest and scholar and was elected as Pope in 1243.

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On May 9, 1244 Innocent IV issue a papal bull [bulla – the seal on papal decrees] to French King Louis IX entitled Impia judoerum perfidia [the unpious treachery of the Jews]. This phrase is a popular epithet against the Jews, calling them a “perfidious” race.

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Innocent IV meets with French king Louis IX, with the Cluny monastery in June 1248

Pope Innocent IV explains that Jesus tolerates Christians and Jews living together, but only in the expectation that the Jews will eventually convert to Christianity. He goes on to say:

“For their part, these ungrateful do not admit [and none repent] their errors and do not revere the honor of the Christian faith.

They have abandoned the law of Moses and the Prophets, following a few traditions of their elders. …”

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Pope Innocent IV sends Dominicans and Franciscans out to the Tartars

King Louis IX is ordered to publicly burn the Talmud and other Jewish texts throughout France because the Talmud contains “blasphemies against God and Christ, the Virgin Mary, forgery and abuse of untold mischief.”

Pope Innocent IV also bans Jews from employing Christian nurses or servants because their faith might become confused, causing them to bring down the wrath of God on themselves.

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Innocent IV (in the middle) I, Ecumenical Councils of Lyons. 1278

The Papal bull (law) reaffirmed the restrictions on Jews implemented by Pope Gregory IX. The Jewish Talmud was banned and Jews were prohibited from hiring Catholics to avoid manual labor.

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The phrase “perfidious Jews” continues to be used in the liturgy until it was removed in 1959.

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Prayer: For too long the church prayed for the ‘perfidious Jews’, and for too long the Jewish people suffered calumny, persecution and anti-Semitic treatment as a result of Christian theological anti-Judaism. Lord, have mercy, both on your church, your people Israel and on all who suffer prejudice, discrimination and hatred because of race, creed or life choices. Help us to model the love, mercy and reconciling forgiveness of your Son the Messiah. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

Click to access 8.1.3.pdf

Schlomo Simonsohn, The Apostolic See and the Jews. (Toronto, The Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 1991), 306.

http://skepticism.org/timeline/may-history/5619-pope-innocent-iv-writes-papal-bull-condemn-jews.html

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

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