25 February 1870 Death of Henrik Hertz, Danish poet and playwright #otdimjh

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Bernstein summarises:

Hertz, Henrik, Danish poet, born at Copenhagen, August 25, 1798; died there February 25, 1870. He embraced Christianity in 1832. His dramatic works alone comprise eighteen volumes and were published in 1854-73.

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A fuller article here:

HERTZ, HENRIK (1797-1870), Danish poet, was born of Jewish parents in Copenhagen on the 25th of August 1798. In 1817 he was sent to the university. His father died in his infancy, and the family property was destroyed in the bombardment of 1807. The boy was brought up by his relative, M. L. Nathanson, a well-known newspaper editor. Young Hertz passed his examination in law in 1825. But his taste was all for polite literature, and in 1826-1827 two plays of his were produced, Mr Burchardt and his Family and Love and Policy; in 1828 followed the comedy of Flyttedagen.

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In 1830 he brought out what was a complete novelty in Danish literature, a comedy in rhymed verse, Amor’s Strokes of Genius. In the same year Hertz published anonymously Gengangerbrevene, or Letters from a Ghost, which he pretended were written by Baggesen, who had died in 1826. The book was written in defence of J. L. Heiberg, and was full of satirical humour and fine critical insight. Its success was overwhelming; but Hertz preserved his anonymity, and the secret was not known until many years later.

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In 1832 he published a didactic poem, Nature and Art, and Four Poetical Epistles. A Day on the Island of Als was his next comedy, followed in 1835 by The Only Fault. Hertz passed through Germany and Switzerland into Italy in 1833; he spent the winter there, and returned the following autumn through France to Denmark. In 1836 his comedy of The Savings Bank enjoyed a great success. But it was not till 1837 that he gave the full measure of his genius in the romantic national drama of Svend Dyrings Hus, a beautiful and original piece.

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His historical tragedy Valdemar Atterdag was not so well received in 1839; but in 1845 he achieved an immense success with his lyrical drama Kong René’s Datter (King René’s Daughter), which has been translated into almost every European language. To this succeeded the tragedy of Ninon in 1848, the romantic comedy of Tonietta in 1849, A Sacrifice in 1853, The Youngest in 1854. His lyrical poems appeared in successive collections, dated 1832, 1840 and 1844. From 1858 to 1859 he edited a literary journal entitled Weekly Leaves. His last drama, Three Days in Padua, was produced in 1869, and he died on the 25th of February of the next year.

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Hertz is one of the first of Danish lyrical poets. His poems are full of colour and passion, his versification has more witchcraft in it than any other poet’s of his age, and his style is grace itself. He has all the sensuous fire of Keats without his proclivity to the antique. As a romantic dramatist he is scarcely less original. He has bequeathed to the Danish theatre, in Svend Dyrings Hus and King René’s Daughter, two pieces which have become classics.

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From King René’s Daughter Iolanta was made an opera by Tchaikovsky – you can listen to it here

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He is a troubadour by instinct; he has little or nothing of Scandinavian local colouring, and succeeds best when he is describing the scenery or the emotions of the glowing south.

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His Dramatic Works (18 vols.) were published at Copenhagen in 1854-1873; and his Poems (4 vols.) in 1851-1862. His play Iolanta was made an opera by Tchaikovsky – you can listen to it here

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Reflection: As Bernstein says, in 1832 he ‘embraced Christianity’. But I can find little reference in his works to Jewish themes of identity, faith, anti-Semitism he encountered, or his religious views. More work is needed here, and perhaps our Danish friends can enlighten us.

Prayer: Thank you Lord for this prolific and gifted poet and playwright, Henrik Hertz, and the lasting contribution he made to Danish life and culture. In the light of the recent anti-Semitic attacks made in Copenhagen, and the historic role of the Danish people in protecting their Jewish citizens, we pray for your grace, mercy and peace on that nation, and that it may ever be a place where Jewish people find a welcome, feel at home, and may sense they belong. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://www.kalliope.org/en/ffront.cgi?fhandle=hertzh

http://www.andersen.sdu.dk/forskning/konference/tekst_e.html?id=10924

http://www.thedodo.info/The%20Dodo/The_Dodo1_Antisemitism_in_Denmark_Soeren_Kierkegaaard.htm

http://read.tidalhifi.com/article/classical-album-of-the-week-tchaikovsky-iolanta-uk

https://archive.org/stream/kingrensdaught00hertiala/kingrensdaught00hertiala_djvu.txt

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24 February 1944 Max Jacob, French avant-garde poet and painter, arrested by the Gestapo

Max Jacob a French artist, who was born Jewish and became a Roman  Catholic, was arrested by the Gestapo and put into Orléans prison. He was then transferred to a holding camp in Drancy for transport to a concentration camp in Germany.

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Max Jacob, an important French poet of the early 20th century, was born to Jewish parents in Quimper, Brittany, in1876. He became a leader of the avant-garde art scene after moving to Paris. Jacob was known for his playful wordplay, and his skill with prose poetry was illustrated in the collection Le Cornet à dés. His poems were set to music by François Poulenc. Also a painter, he lived in extreme poverty. Jacob met Pablo Picasso in 1901. They shared a studio and later lived three doors from each other in Paris.

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Jacob had a vision of Jesus in 1909 in a landscape he had painted. He became a Catholic but struggled with homosexuality and heavy drinking. “He fervently believed in his new faith,” said author Sydney Levy, “but it did not affect his personality or his art. . . . Christianity tolerated his presence in its midst with difficulty.”

Jesus on the cross - Max Jacob

Jesus on the cross – Max Jacob

In 1921 he moved to the small village of Saint-Benoit-sur-Loire, where he remained until the Gestapo arrested him in February 1944. They took him to a holding camp in Drancy, where he grew gravely ill and died on March 5, 1944.

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Gabriel Aghion, who directed a movie about Jacob, holds Jacob’s friends, especially Picasso, responsible for his death. “All of his friends . . . could have saved him, but they didn’t,” Aghion said. “They spent the war drinking champagne.”

washerwomen at pont fleuri

washerwomen at pont fleuri

“There is no need to do anything,” Picasso said after Jacob’s arrest. “Max is an imp. He does not need us to fly away from his prison.”

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Prayer: Thank you Lord for giving Max Jacob a vision of yourself. As a tortured soul who lived in tortured times, his gifts of art and poetry allowed him creative ways to express the search for beauty and truth. In you he found true peace, but in his life on this earth he struggled with his own weaknesses, and the evil that engulfed Europe. May his memory be a blessing, and his work live on in the art that expresses something of your eternal beauty. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

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http://www.jewsforjesus.org/publications/issues/v17-n04/03

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUzjJ74jyYQ&list=PLNCTpbqq5_ejSKFwPCW6TXbMolryImTeE

http://priv-art-collection.com/artistes-Max_Jacob-J%C3%A9sus%20sur%20la%20Croix%20avec%20Marie%20et%20Magdeleine-6-30-211.html

http://www.max-jacob.com/biobibliographie.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpxBHiLzK0E

http://www.guastalla.com/en/works/234/paesaggio

Synopsis

Born to Jewish parents on July 12, 1876, in Quimper, France, Max Jacob became a leader of the avant-garde art scene after moving to Paris. Jacob was known for his playful wordplay, and his skill with prose poetry was illustrated in the collection Le Cornet à dés. Although he converted to Catholicism in 1915, Jacob was arrested by the Gestapo in early 1944 and died two weeks later in a prison camp.

Early Life

Writer Max Jacob was born on July 12, 1876, in Quimper, France. The son of Jewish tailors and antique dealers, he felt the sting of anti-Semitism as a child. After studying at College La Tour-d’Auvergne, he stole money from his mother to move to Paris in 1897.

Artistic Development

Jacob took a series of odd jobs after arriving in Paris, serving as an art critic, piano teacher and shopkeeper, among other professions. He also fell in with the avant-garde writers and artists who roamed the city at the turn of the century, becoming a close friend and roommate of Pablo Picasso.

Immersed in art during an era when symbolism, cubism, surrealism and other modernist forms were converging, Jacob borrowed from many of these styles without definitively belonging to any one category. He was, however, recognized as one of the leading practitioners of prose poetry, as demonstrated in his celebrated collection, Le Cornet à dés. Other noted poetic collections include Le Laboratoire Central and Poèmes de Morvan le Gaëlique, and in the prose-poetry hybrid La Défense de Tartufe, and other novels, plays and letters, he displayed a playful penchant for wordplay.

Jacob also cultivated a talent for visual art. Although he was far more renowned for his ability with words, he secured exhibitions in Paris and New York City for his drawings and paintings.

Spirituality

Jacob claimed to have had a vision of Christ in one of his paintings in 1909. He converted to Catholicism in 1915, with Picasso taking on the role of his godfather, although his conversion did little to stem his homosexual urges, as he had hoped.

Tired of the temptations of the bohemian lifestyle, Jacob moved to the Benedictine monastery at Saint Benoît-sur-Loire in 1921. He continued to travel and returned to Paris for extended stints, but spent the bulk of his time painting and writing at the monastery over the following two decades.

Death and Legacy

On February 24, 1944, Max Jacob was arrested by the Gestapo at Saint Benoît-sur-Loire. Weakened by advancing age and four days amid squalid conditions in Orleans prison, he died of pneumonia at Drancy transit camp on March 5, 1944.

Although Jacob is not remembered in the same regard as his former compatriot, Picasso, or other French poets such as Charles Baudelaire or Arthur Rimbaud, he is nonetheless recognized as an important contributor to the early 20th century Parisian scene that sought to tear down existing ideals and redefine artistic concepts for successive generations.

Commonweal‘s February 27, 2009 issue had a short piece entitled “The Perfect Sinner” by Harold Bordwell.   It was about Max Jacob, a French Jew born in Brittany, who was a painter, poet, novelist, playwright, and critic, who played an important role in the formative years of Cubism as well as in the new directions of modern poetry during the early 20th century. His poetry was made up of an amalgam of Jewish, Breton, Parisian and Roman Catholic elements.

Max Jacob alternated between a wildly bohemian lifestyle and periods of contemplation.   He converted to Catholicism in 1915, after experiencing a vision of Christ a few years earlier.   But his conversion did not save him from the Gestapo, who rounded him up and took him to Drancy internment camp.   He died there of pneumonia on March 5, 1944, two days before he was scheduled to be sent to Auschwitz.   He was 68. His body was eventually returned to his home of Saint-Benoit-sur-Loire near Orleans.

Saint-Benoit was the site of a celebrated abbey church. Max Jacob first came to Saint-Benoit in 1921, and stayed there periodically until 1937, when he settled down permanently, living a quietly religious life–early daily Mass, evening prayer, and working as a church guide.

Max Jacob reminds me of David, a “man after God’s own heart.” Sensuous, a sinner, each man experienced periods of prayful contemplation and penitence. But in their full and vivid life each also held God in a loved and honored place.

Max Jacob chose Saint-Benoit to escape his disorderly and worldly life–he was homosexual, he took drugs, he liked to play the clown–and, as his biographer Beatrice Mousli notes, to benearer to God and away from his temptations that he could never resist in Paris.

It was a very different life than his days in Paris, where his writings and gouache paintings led to friendships with Picasso, Jean Cocteau, anf Guillaume Apollinaire, among others.   There were rumors that Jacob was a male lover of Picasso. “Oh, Picasso was absolutely having sex with Max Jacob. And everyone knew!”, said John Richardson, Picasso’s biographer. Even Picasso’s mistress, Fernande Olivier, noted upon first meeting Jacob that the two men were “toujours ensemble.”

In his journals, novelist Julian Green remembers how Max Jacob used to haunt the Cafe Select by night, and then the next morning hurry down the boulevard to Notre-Dame-des-Champs to confess his sins, with the priests hiding behind the church columns but knowing that one of them would eventually have to listen to the same sins they all knew by heart.

Green calls Max Jacob the perfect sinner because he was truly sorry for his sins, which didn’t prevent him from starting all over the next day.

En 1928, Max Jacob exécute une centai­ne d’illustrations sur les souffrances et la mort de Jésus. C’est par amitié pour Maurice Sachs qu’il fait ses dessins. C’est probablement en décembre 1925 que Max Jacob rencontre Maurice Sachs chez Jean Cocteau. C’est le 2 janvier 1926 que Sachs entre au séminaire. Il a dix-neuf ans, est charmant, mince, intelligent, ce n’est pas encore le Maurice Sachs que beaucoup connaî­tront abîmé par le vol, l’alcool et la débauche. Max Jacob, quelques années plus tard, se brouillera jusqu’à la fin de ses jours avec lui, estimant que Maurice Sachs l’avait “poignardé dans la vie”.
Seuls quarante dessins seront publiés en 1928 par Maurice Sachs sous le titre “Visions des Souffrances et de la Mort de Jésus Fils de Dieu” édité Aux Quatre Chemins, Paris. Le dessin ci-dessus, devant faire partie du chapitre “Jésus dénudé”, ne fait pas partie du recueil. La signature et la date n’a été rajouté quelques années plus tard par Max Jacob, comme pour de nombreuses de ces œuvres; ce qui explique l’erreur de date. En effet, pour subsister,  Max ven­dait quand il le pouvait à quelques ama­teurs des dessins restés dans ses car­tons, les collectionneurs exigeant date et signature.

Modigliani's portrait of Max Jacob

Modigliani’s portrait of Max Jacob

Poulenc’s 5 poems of Max Jacob 

Poulenc knew Max Jacob from 1920, as he was very much part of the Parisian avant-garde scene at that time. The composer found these poems in No 22 of the review Commerce (Winter 1929) where twenty lyrics are printed under the Breton pseudonym of ‘Morven Le Gaëlique’. Poulenc selected five, sometimes changing their titles: Chanson bretonne was simply published as Chanson, as was Souric et Mouric. Berceuse was in fact originally Berceuse de la petite servante, linking songs iii and iv to the same character. In his JdmM Poulenc’s special fondness for these songs, and for Jacob, is clearly expressed.
“Chanson bretonne” is best described by the composer himself: ‘The scene is the market place of Guidel in Brittany one summer morning. A peasant girl recounts, very simply, her misfortunes.’ The middle of the song offers Poulenc’s most extended passage of bird music in his mélodies, a succession of trills and grace notes. Mention of a chicken dancing with a little cat adds an air of unreality to a scenario that in other ways seems convincingly, even aggressively, down to earth—but that is Max Jacob for you. In some ways this is a scene that might have been painted by a Breton incarnation of the Russian Marc Chagall.
“Cimetière” is an enchanting waltz of great tenderness, a French Allerseelen (lighter-hearted of course) where the singer envisages herself buried in a country cemetery and visited by her relatives and her sailor lover. Grocery shops near to the cemetery used to sell ready-made wreaths for visits such as these, ‘painted iron and decorated with satin and pearls’ as Bernac describes the commercialism of religious kitsch. This is the kind of bad taste which Poulenc loved to subject, affectionately of course, to the refining fire of his own musical inspiration.
“La petite servante” is influenced, says the composer, by Musorgksy, but also clearly by the Stravinsky of Mavra and Les noces. Russia here meets Brittany in the almost medieval depth of its faith and superstition. The kind of incantation hurled out at the beginning of the song would not be out of place during an era of witch burnings and ducking-stools. The existence of the devil as a real person with a pitchfork is not in doubt. On the last page, where the girl at last allows herself to dream of something nice-a husband who is not too drunk or abusive-the composer allows himself at last a truly Poulencian turn of legato phrasing and harmony, having become bored with playing at being Russian.
In “Berceuse”, says Poulenc, ‘everything is topsy-turvy: the father is at mass, the mother at a tavern. A waltz rhythm takes the place of a cradle song. It is redolent of cider and the acrid smell of the thatched cottages.’ This is a companion piece to A Charm (Quiet, sleep!) from Britten’s A Charm of Lullabies: both songs feature the baby-sitter from hell, here a beggar woman’s daughter, not at all enamoured of children. The song’s closing verse has a charming insouciance: she would rather be shrimping, or cooking a bisque, than remain indoors with a disobligingly sick brat.
“Souric et Mouric” is another song where, despite the Breton provenance of the poetry, Stravinsky’s Russia and Poulenc’s Paris meet in the middle. The angularity of the opening vocal line suggests mechanical music, the sinister spinning of a spider, and Poulenc admits as much in JdmM—he sees this music as a ‘counting song’ to be delivered as fast as possible. The second half of the song (from ‘Chantez, les rainettes’) is an early example, to an even more pronounced degree than the end of La petite servante, of what might be termed ‘real Poulenc’—one of the composer’s seductive nocturnes where the tempo retreats from the furore of the vertiginous opening, and sensuously chimes with the movement of the stars and the call of the frogs. This is genuinely touching and almost completely original music, with only the ghost of Stravinsky’s Oedipus Rex haunting the music’s calm and radiant gravity.

Source: http://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/al….

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23 February 1813 Birth of Franz Delitzsch, Christian Hebraist, translator of the New Testament, and supporter of Messianic Judaism #otdimjh

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Franz Delitzsch (Leipzig, February 23, 1813 – Leipzig, March 4, 1890) was a German Lutheran theologian and Hebraist. Born in Leipzig, he held the professorship of theology at the University of Rostock from 1846 to 1850, at the University of Erlangen until 1867, and after that at the University of Leipzig until his death. Delitzsch wrote many commentaries on books of the Bible, Jewish antiquities, Biblical psychology, a history of Jewish poetry, and Christian apologetics.

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He defended the Jewish community against anti-Judaic attacks and translated the New Testament into Hebrew. In 1880 he established the Institutum Judaicum in Leipzig for the training of missionary workers among Jews.

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Today, Delitzsch is best known for his translation of the New Testament into Hebrew. In 1873 the British and Foreign Bible Society commissioned Franz Delitzsch to prepare a translation of the New Testament into Hebrew. Delitzsch agreed and set to work utilizing his extensive knowledge of mishnaic Hebrew and first century Judaism to create a translation and reconstruction of the Greek text back into an original Hebrew voice. His reconstructing translation was completed in 1877. After the first edition, it went through extensive review and revision for the next 13 years. The final edition was published in 1890 under the care and supervision of Gustav Dalman. Today it has been republished by Vine of David.

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Delitzsch also collaborated with Johann Friedrich Karl Keil on a commentary series which covers the whole of the Old Testament and is still in print, having first appeared in 1861. Delitzsch contributed the commentaries on Book of Job, Psalms, Book of Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon, and Book of Isaiah. Independent of the commentary series collaboration with Keil, Delitzsch wrote a commentary on the book of Genesis originally published by T & T Clark in 1888. Klock and Klock published a 1978 reprint of the English translation by Sophia Taylor.

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Delitzsch was a supporter of the Messianic movement, giving his name to the work of Joseph Rabinowitz in Kishinev when he set up the “Israelites of the New Covenant” community and congregation.

His son, Friedrich Delitzsch (1850–1922), was an influential Assyriologist and author of works on Assyrian language, literature, and history.

delitzsch grave

Today the Institute for Israelogy awards the Franz Delitzsch prize to those who make significant contributions to the study of Yeshua, his people Israel, and the Church.

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Prayer: Thank you, Lord, for the work of your servant Franz Delitzsch, and his gifts of scholarship that opened up to Christians deeper understanding of the Scriptures, and helped Jewish people read the New Testament in Hebrew. May there be bridge-builders today between Jews and Christians, who help both to see the nature of the Good News of the Messiah Yeshua, the true bridge between you, our Creator, and all your Creation. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://vineofdavid.org/resources/dhe/the-delitzsch-hebrew-gospels/

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Franz-Delitzsch/125266054154794

https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=1528811532895&set=vb.125266054154794&type=2&theater

http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=Delitzsch%2C%20Franz%2C%201813-1890

http://vineofdavid.org/videos/delitzsch-hebrew-gospels/the-life-of-franz-delitzsch.html

http://www.lutherischebeitraege.de/Uschomirski_Die-Wiederentdeckung.pdf

http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/5063-delitzsch-franz

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

Familie

Franz Julius Delitzsch wurde als Sohn des Händlers, Handarbeiters und Tagelöhners Johann Gottfried Delitzsch und der Susanna Rosina, geb. Müller, in Leipzig geboren. Er war das jüngste von drei Kindern seiner Eltern, darunter das einzige, das das frühe Säuglingsalter überlebte.

Dass Delitzsch trotz der kleinen Verhältnisse, aus denen er stammte, Schule und Universität besuchen konnte, verdankte er dem jüdischen Antiquar Lewy Hirsch, den er seinen “Wohltäter von Jugend an” nannte. Der jüdische Händler wohnte in demselben Haus und stand der Familie Delitzsch nahe.

Franz Delitzsch ist der Vater des bekannten Assyriologen Friedrich Delitzsch (1850-1922), der den Babel-Bibel-Streit auslöste.

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Nach seinem Theologiestudium wurde Franz Delitzsch Professor für Altes Testament an den Universitäten Leipzig (1844), Rostock (1846), Erlangen (1850) und schließlich wieder in Leipzig (1867) und galt als großer Kenner der rabbinischen Literatur.

Franz Delitzsch hat Zeit seines Lebens viele auch bis heute noch bedeutende Projekte initiiert und mitgeprägt. Dazu gehört u.a. das “Institutum Judaicum Delitzschianum”, welches er 1886 zusammen mit einem Leipziger Pfarrer gründete. Das Ziel dieses Instituts war es, die Judenmission auf der Welt mit theologisch-wissenschaftlicher Arbeit zu unterstützen.

Ein anderes Projekt war seine Übersetzung des Neuen Testaments ins Hebräische, damit Juden mit dem Neuen Testament und mit Jesus Christus vertraut werden konnten. An dieser Übersetzung arbeitete er 51 Jahre lang.

Ein drittes großes Projekt war die Kommentierung des Alten Testaments, die er zusammen mit seinem Kollegen Karl Friedrich Keil erarbeitete. Diese Reihe wurde später als die “Keil-Delitzsch-Reihe” bekannt und ist vor allem für ihre philologische Genauigkeit berühmt.

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22 February Feast of the Martyrdom of Polycarp of Smyrna – Jewish involvement questionable #otdimjh

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Polycarp’s life is known mainly from the writings of his disciple Irenaeus of Lyons, made familiar to a wide audience by the extensive quotations in Eusebius. Irenaeus is depicted as the heir to the Johannine tradition; his uncompromising opposition to the heretic Marcion is equated with the evangelist’s to Cerinthus. Polycarp was also a defender of the Johannine Easter date of the 14th of Nisan, and late in life made a visit to Rome for inconclusive talks on the subject with Pope Anicetus. Besides John, Polycarp was connected with another outstanding figure of the apostolic church: Ignatius of Antioch addressed an epistle to him.

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Polycarp was the bishop of Smyrna (modern Izmir) in western Asia Minor. Members of his flock wrote an extremely detailed account of their aged hierarch’s martyrdom, one of the most famous documents to be passed down from the age of persecution.

Polycarp was born about 69 A. D. In his early years, he was a disciple of John, the beloved disciple, in Ephesus. Polycarp’s deeds in the Church are somewhat shrouded in mystery. Once, upon meeting Marcion, one of the Church’s first major heretics, Polycarp is reported to have refused to acknowledge him, and even called Marcion “a child of the devil.”

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Polycarp was arrested during a persecution in the area of Smyrna in the mid-150’s. Being nearly ninety years old, the Roman governor urged the aged bishop to curse Christ, sacrifice to the genius of the emperor, and live. Polycarp’s response was: “For eighty-six years I have served Christ, and He has never injured me. Therefore how could I curse and blaspheme my King, who has given me salvation?”

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Being steadfast in the faith, Polycarp was handed over to be burned at the stake. It is reported that, as he sat in the flames, he prayed, “O God, the Father of Your Son, Jesus Christ, through whom we have received knowledge of You, the Maker of all creation, I call upon You, I confess You, that You are true God; I glorify You because of the high priest, Your beloved Son, with the Holy Spirit; receive me and make me a sharer in the resurrection of Your saints. Amen.”

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Tradition says that Polycarp actually survived the flames and was finally put to death by being run through with a sword.

Polycarp remains significant to the Church today. He is the bridge between the apostolic age and the age of the confessors in the second and third centuries. Polycarp’s Epistle to the Philippians remains today. Also, The Martyrdom of Polycarp, written by Irenaeus, one of Polycarp’s disciples, and Caius, one of Irenaeus’ associates, remains to this day an encouragement to believers around the globe in times of persecution.

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That the Jewish people are implicated in the death of Polycarp is an assumption handed down through tradition, but as Miriam S. Taylor explains (below), the historicity of this association should be questioned, and seen rather to develop parallels and echoes with the crucifixion of Yeshua himself.

Prayer: Thank you, Lord, for the faithful witness of Polycarp, the hearer of John and a historic link to the first disciples. Thank you for his testimony unto death, and the example he has been to others throughout the history of the ecclesia. Help us to honour his memory whilst purging the legend of anti-Jewish elements that have been included. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/polycarp.html

https://www.christianhistoryinstitute.org/study/module/polycarp/

http://www.polycarp.net/

http://thesouthtexaslutheran.blogspot.co.uk/2011/02/st-polycarp.html

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

Anti-Judaism and Early Christian  Identity: A Critique of the Scholarly Consensus

By Miriam S. Taylor

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21 February 1848 Karl Marx publishes the Communist Manifesto #otdimjh #onthisda

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Bernstein includes Marx in “Some Jewish Witnesses for Christ”

Marx, Karl, born at Treves, in 1818. He was baptized with his father, his brother, and five sisters in 1824. In 1842, he became editor of “Reinische Zeitung für Politik, Handel, und Gewerbe.” In 1843, he published at Paris, “Zür Kritik der Hegelschen Rechts Philosophie.” In 1848 he edited the “Neue Rheinische Zeitung.” He is known as the founder of the political theory called Socialism, and on account of that he came in conflict with several governments, and he sought refuge in England. He married the sister [358] of the minister, von Westphal. She died in 1881, and he also passed away in 1883, in London.

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Karl Heinreich Marx was born in Trier, Rhenish Prussia (present-day Germany), on May 5, 1818, the son of Heinrich Marx, a lawyer, and Henriette Presburg Marx, a Dutchwoman. Both Heinrich and Henriette were descendants of a long line of rabbis. Heinrich had converted to Protestantism in 1816 or 1817 in order to continue practicing law after the Prussian edict denying Jews to the bar. Karl was baptized in 1824, but his mother, Henriette, did not convert until 1825, when Karl was 7.

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While the family did not appear religious at all — it was said that not a single volume on religion or theology was in Heinrich’s modest library — Karl was raised in an atmosphere of religious toleration. There was some discrimination against Jews in the area, but general religious tolerance was the standard. Karl was sent to religious school primarily for academic rather than religious training. On the whole, the family was not committed to either evangelical Protestantism or evangelical Judaism.

Karl attended a Lutheran elementary school but later became an atheist and a materialist (one who believes that physical matter is all that is real), rejecting both the Christian and Jewish religions. It was he who coined the saying “Religion is the opiate of the people,” a basic principle in modern communism.

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On 21 February 1848 Karl Marx, along with Friedrich Engels, published the Communist Manifesto.

Vincent Miceli notes:

The family lived as very liberal Protestants, that is, without any profound religious beliefs. Thus, Karl grew up without an inhibiting consciousness of himself as being Jewish. In changing his credal allegience, or course, the father, newly baptized Heinrich, experienced the alienation of turning his back on his religious family and traditions. Thus, though politically emancipated and socially liberated from the ghetto, the experience of being uprooted and not completely at home in the Germany of the nineteenth century did affect the Marx family (Miceli, Atheism, pp. 94, 95)

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In his early years Marx won a prize for his essay on the Trinity. But studying Hegel and Feuerbach led him to a thoroughgoing atheism. Nevertheless his writing is seeped in Jewish themes, and his secular apocalyptic vision of revolution qualifies him to be seen as a Jewish prophet promoting a heretical version of the biblical metanarrative.

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In October 1835 Marx enrolled in Bonn University in Bonn, Germany, where he attended courses primarily in law, as it was his father’s desire that he become a lawyer. Marx, however, was more interested in philosophy and literature than in law. He wanted to be a poet and dramatist. In his student days he wrote a great deal of poetry—most of it preserved—that in his mature years he rightly recognized as imitative and unremarkable.

He spent a year at Bonn, studying little but partying and drinking a lot. He also piled up heavy debts. Marx’s dismayed father took him out of Bonn and had him enter the University of Berlin, then a center of intellectual discussion. In Berlin a circle of brilliant thinkers was challenging existing institutions and ideas, including religion, philosophy, ethics and politics. Marx joined this group of radical thinkers wholeheartedly. He spent more than four years in Berlin, completing his studies with a doctoral degree in March 1841.

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Marx then turned to writing and journalism to support himself. In 1842 he became editor of the liberal Cologne newspaper Rheinische Zeitung, but the Berlin government prohibited it from being published the following year. In January 1845 Marx was expelled from France “at the instigation of the Prussian government,” as he said. He moved to Brussels where he founded the German Workers’ Party and was active in the Communist League. Here he wrote the famous Manifesto of the Communist Party.

Expelled by the Belgian government, Marx moved back to Cologne, where he became editor of the Neue Rheinische Zeitung in June 1848. Less than a year later, the Prussian government stopped the paper, and Marx himself was exiled. He went to Paris, but in September the French government expelled him again. Marx finally settled in London, England, where he lived as a stateless exile. Britain denied him citizenship and Prussia refused to take him back as a citizen for the rest of his life.

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In London Marx’s sole means of support was journalism. He wrote for both German-and English-language publications. From August 1852 to March 1862 he was correspondent for the New York Daily Tribune, contributing a total of about 355 articles. Journalism, however, paid very poorly; Marx was saved from starvation by the financial support of friend and fellow writer, Friedrich Engels (1820–1895). In London in 1864 Marx helped to found the International Workingmen’s Association (known as the First International), for which he wrote the inaugural address. Thereafter Marx’s political activities were limited mainly to exchanging letters with radicals in Europe and America, offering advice, and helping to shape the socialist and labor movements.

Personal life

Marx was married to his childhood sweetheart, Jenny von Westphalen, who was known as the “most beautiful girl in Trier,” on June 19, 1843. She was devoted to him. She died of cancer on December 2, 1881, at the age of sixty-seven. For Marx it was a blow from which he never recovered.

The Marxes had seven children, four of whom died in infancy or childhood. He deeply loved his daughters, who, in turn, adored him. Of the three surviving daughters—Jenny, Laura, and Eleanor—two married Frenchmen. Both of Marx’s sons-in-law became prominent French socialists and members of Parliament. Eleanor was active as a British labor organizer.

Marx spent most of his working time in the British Museum, doing research both for his newspaper articles and his books. In preparation for Das Kapital he read every available work in economic and financial theory and practice.

Marx’s excessive smoking, wine drinking, and love of heavily spiced foods may have been contributing causes to his illnesses. In the final dozen years of his life, he could no longer do any continuous intellectual work. He died in his armchair in London on March 14, 1883, about two months before his sixty-fifth birthday. He lies buried in London’s Highgate Cemetery, where his grave is marked by a bust.

Marx’s influence has been compared to that of Moses and Jesus. Perhaps more than any other thinker he has shaped the history of the 20th century, with its revolutions and Communist regimes in Russia, China and South America. Today its effects continue, although the ideologies of Marxism has been discredited. Marxism still has profound influence in social theory, cultural studies and political analysis today. Many Jewish radicals were attracted to Marxist philosophy, especially in Russia and the early Zionist movement. Marx’s own views on Jews and Judaism are open to various interpretations, but are generally seen as reacting against the nascent anti-Semitism that saw no place for Jews in modern societies.

Prayer: Lord, it is impossible to ignore the influence of Marx and his writings on the modern world. Yet his atheism and communism, whilst bringing a prophetic critique of the inequality derived from all forms of social organisation, do not do justice to the social and economic teaching of the Scriptures, nor acknowledge your presence and the reality of the spiritual life. May the reforming zeal of Marx be correctly applied to situations of injustice and inequality today. May your divine love revealed to all humanity and all creation through your son, the Messiah Yeshua, be made known. May we be living and faithful examples of that revolution that changes the human heart as well as the societies in which we live. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/sociology/staff/emeritus/robertfine/home/teachingmaterial/humanrights/pdfreadings/on_the_jewish_question_by_karl_marx.pdf

http://www.notablebiographies.com/Ma-Mo/Marx-Karl.html#ixzz3SJn2Cosw

http://www.engageonline.org.uk/journal/index.php?journal_id=10&article_id=33

Karl Marx and the Radical Critique of Anti-Semitism – Robert Fine

http://www.adherents.com/people/pm/Karl_Marx.html

https://www.academia.edu/258900/Marx_on_the_Jewish_Question

FROM THEOLOGY TO SOCIOLOGY:BRUNO BAUER AND KARL MARX ON THE QUESTION OF JEWISH EMANCIPATION

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20 February 2010 Anna Foa reviews “The Nazarene” by Israel Zolli, Rome’s Chief Rabbi who became a Catholic in 1945

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In his autobiography, Before the Dawn: Autobiographical Reflections by Eugenio Zolli, Former Chief Rabbi of Rome, Zolli said that while presiding over the religious service in the synagogue on the holy day of Yom Kippur in 1944, he experienced a vision of Jesus.

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On February 13, 1945, Zolli, his second wife, and daughter converted to Catholicism (his first wife having died years earlier). He was baptized at the Gregorian University by Mgr. Luigi Traglia in the presence of Father Paolo Dezza; his godfather was Augustin Bea. Zolli was christened “Eugenio Maria Zolli” in homage to Pope Pius XII who was born Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli.

Rabbi Israel Zolli

Rabbi Israel Zolli

By Alan Brill: A review just appeared in Italian, and is online in translation, by the Jewish Historian Anna Foa of “Il Nazareno” by Rabbi Zolli.  Jews do not usually want to discuss the case of the Chief Rabbi of Rome who converted to Catholicism after the war and became Eugenio Zolli. The review attempts to situate his views within trends in Jewish scholarship and what was being taught at the various seminaries and Jewish academies. Unlike the German Jewish authors (Geiger, Buber) and later Israeli authors (Klausner) who painted Jesus as a liberal Jew, Zolli stresses the discontinuity of the two faiths. Christianity as forgiveness and love.

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“All by myself, I read the Gospel, and experienced measureless delight. What a surprise I received in the middle of the green lawn: ‘But I say to you: Love your enemies.’ And from the height of the cross: ‘Father, forgive them.’ The New Testament really is a covenant… brand new! Everything in it seemed to me to have an extraordinary importance. Teachings like: ‘Blessed are the pure of heart’ and the prayer from the cross draw a line of demarcation between the world of ancient ideas and a new moral cosmos. Yes! Here there arises a new world. Here are delineated the sublime forms of the Kingdom of Heaven, of the persecuted who have not persecuted in return, but have loved.”

On the other hand, he warned the Jewish community of Rome of the true threat of the Nazis and wanted to declare a total state of emergency and the Jewish community leaders did not see the need. “One cannot deny that the measures he suggested — such as the closing of the temple and of the oratories, the general alarm, and many other things — would have saved the lives, if not of all, of very many Jews.”

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Full version of book review

Interview with the editor

The rabbi who studied Jesus by Anna Foa

The book “Il Nazareno” by Eugenio Zolli appeared in 1938, published by the Istituto delle Edizioni Accademiche in Udine. Israel Zolli, who would later become Eugenio, was at the time chief rabbi in Trieste, and had not yet become – as he would a year later – chief rabbi of Rome in the place of Rabbi David Prato.

Israel Eugenio Zolli

Seven years later, in February 1945, causing great scandal in the Italian Jewish world and a great stir in the non-Jewish community as well, Israel Zolli converted to Catholicism, taking Pope Pacelli’s name with baptism, and thus becoming Eugenio Zoll.

A volume about Jesus Christ written by a prominent rabbi, then, destined a short time later, in spite of this book and the vague whiff of heresy that surrounded him for many years, to become the leading rabbi of the Roman Jewish community.

Is the book a prefiguring of the author’s later journey, an anticipation of his subsequent baptism? Or does it reflect a journey of exegetical studies, with attention to the figure of Jesus Christ, undertaken by much European Jewish exegetical thought beginning in the second half of the nineteenth century?

The rabbi from Trieste writes about Jesus and about relations between early Christianity and the rabbinical culture of the time with accents and ideas not dissimilar from those of his teachers at the rabbinical college of Florence, Chayes and Margulies, and raising far less serious controversies than Joseph Klausner’s book on “Jesus the Nazarene,” which at its publication in Hebrew in Jerusalem in 1921 was attacked by both Orthodox Jews and Christians…

This area of study was very popular with Jewish scholars all over Europe, and in particular with those from Germany, heirs of the Science of Judaism and linked with the reformed currents, which strongly emphasized the Jewishness of Jesus and highlighted the correspondences between rabbinical Judaism and early Christianity. But it was also a favorite of Christian scholars, especially Protestant ones, in nineteenth-century Germany, in the setting of the school of Tubingen and of the later schools of liberal theology, and was assimilated, at the beginning of the new century, by modernist Catholic scholars.

Italian Jewish culture did not share this attention to the historical figure of Christianity, to the Jewish categories of its preaching, and to its Jewish roots in general.

Zolli wrote: “Conversion consists in responding to a call from God. A man is not converted at the time he chooses, but at the hour when he receives God’s call. When the call is heard, he who receives it has only one thing to do: obey. Paul is ‘converted’. Did he abandon the God of Israel? Did he cease to love Israel? It would be absurd to think so. But then? The convert is who feels impelled by an irresistible force to leave a pre-established order and seek his own proper way. It would be easier to continue along the road he was on.”

Prayer: Lord, you alone know our thoughts and motives. Judge us with your grace and mercy, and discern our hearts. In Yeshuas name we pray. Amen.

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

http://chiesa.espresso.repubblica.it/articolo/1342271?eng=y

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19 February 1543 Pope Paul III opens House of Catechumens in Rome

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CATECHUMENS, HOUSE OF (Casa dei catecumeni), institution in Rome for intended converts (catechumens) and converts in Christianity (neofiti). A building in Rome to house intended Jewish or Muslim converts to Christianity was allocated by Pope Paul III in 1543.

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In 1554, Pope Julius III imposed a tax of ten gold ducats on each of the 115 synagogues in the Papal States to cover the cost of maintaining the converts. Subsequently the tax was borne by the Jewish community in Rome alone, which had to pay 1,100 scudi yearly. A College of Neophytes was established in 1575 to accommodate converts who wished to enter a religious order. Both institutions were supervised by a cardinal-protector. Houses of catechumens were also established in other Italian cities where there was a ghetto. The potential convert received instruction for 40 days, and if he then refused baptism was allowed to go back to the ghetto.

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The pressures exerted on him however were so great that this seldom happened. It is estimated that 1,195 Jews were baptized in Rome between 1634 and 1700, and 1,237 between 1700 and 1790, i.e., two per 1,000 and one per 1,000 respectively of the total Jewish population in these periods. The Jewish contributions were abolished in 1810. As late as 1864 a Jewish peddler was savagely punished for passing under the windows of the House of Catechumens in Rome. The House of Catechumens still exists in name.

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Prayer: Lord, we ask your mercy and forgiveness for the pressure that was placed on your people Israel, in these times of the Protestandt Reformation and Roman Catholic Counter-Reformation, to single them out for ‘conversion’. Not by might, nor by power,  but by Your Spirit, should Your work be done. Amen.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

  1. Milano, Ghetto di Roma (1964), 283–306; C. Roth, Venice (1930), 118; A. Balletti, Gli ebrei e gli Estensi (19302), 207–20.

http://www.j-italy.org/explore/regions/lazio-l/rome-l-l/

Pope *Martin V categorically forbade (c. 1419) the baptism of Jewish infants below the age of 12 without the parents’ permission, to counteract an abuse which was at this time becoming widespread. But a new chapter in the history of forcible baptism began with the institution in Rome in 1543 of the House of *Catechumens (Casa dei Catecumeni), speedily followed in other cities. To justify their existence these institutions had to elaborate a system of propagating the faith, in which ultimately it became difficult to differentiate force from persuasion. Any person who could be imagined by whatever casuistry as having shown an inclination toward Christianity, or who could be considered to be under the authority of a person already converted, could be immured in the House of Catechumens in order to “explore his intention,” meanwhile being submitted to unremitting pressure. In 1635 it was decided that the baptism of the head of a household could entail, if he expressed the desire, that of all those members of his family who were under age or dependent upon him, and this was subsequently extended to cover even more remote cases. There had moreover grown up a popular superstition that any person who secured the baptism of an unbeliever was assured of paradise, this leading to a spate of such ceremonies, verging on parody in execution though not in their tragic outcome, throughout the Catholic world.

The entire tenor of Roman Jewish life suddenly changed for the worse with the counter-reformation. In 1542, a tribunal of the holy office on the Spanish model was set up in Rome and in 1553, Cornelio Da Montalcino, a Franciscan friar who had embraced Judaism, was burned alive on the Camp dei Fiori. In 1543, a home for converted Jews (house of catechumens), later to be the scene of many tragic episodes, was established, a good part of the burden of upkeep being imposed on the Jews themselves.

Hebrew books was committed to the flames after official condemnation. On July 12, 1555, Pope Paul IV issued his bull, cum nimis absurdum, which reenacted remorselessly against the Jews all the restrictive ecclesiastical Legislation hitherto only intermittently enforced. This comprised the segregation of the Jews in a special quarter, henceforth called the ghetto; the wearing of the Jewish badge, now specified as a yellow hat in the case of men, a yellow kerchief in the case of women; prohibitions on owning real estate, on being called by any title of respect such as signor, on the employment by Christians of Jewish physicians, and on dealing in corn and other necessities of life; and virtual restriction to dealing in old clothes and second-hand goods.

This initiated the ghetto period in Rome, and continued to govern the life ofroman Jewry for more than 300 years. Occasional raids were made as late as the 18th century on the ghetto to ensure that the Jews did not possess any “forbidden” books – that is, in effect, any literature other than the Bible, Liturgy, and carefully expurgated ritual codes. Each Saturday selected members of the community were compelled to go to a neighboring church to listen to proseletysing sermons, running the gauntlet of the insults of the populace. In some reactionary interludes, the yellow Jewish hat had to be worn even inside the ghetto.

In the ghetto there were five synagogues or “Scole,” located on different floors of teh same building: the Scola Tempio for the most ancient Roman Jews, the Scola Nova for those that came from small villages of Lazio, the Siciliana for the Jewish refugees from Southern Italy, the Catalana and the Castigliana for the Spanish Jews.

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18 February 1546 Death of Luther – Last Sermon ends with Warnings against the Jews

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From 1533 to his death in 1546, Martin Luther served as the dean of theology at University of Wittenberg. During this time he suffered from many illnesses, including arthritis, heart problems and digestive disorders, and the physical pain and emotional strain of being a fugitive might have been reflected in his writings. Some works contained strident and offensive language against several segments of society, particularly Jews and Muslims. During a trip to his hometown of Eisleben, he died on February 18, 1546, at age 62.

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Shortly before his death on February 18, 1546 Luther preached four sermons in Eisleben (on February 14). To his second last sermon he appended what he called his “final warning” against the Jews. The main point of this short work is that authorities who could expel the Jews from their lands should do so if they would not convert to Christianity. Otherwise, Luther indicated, such authorities would make themselves “partners in another’s sins”.

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Luther set off on his last trip on January 17, 1546, to his birthplace Eisleben (only in German). Although he was drawn with illness, he went to settle a dispute among the Mansfeld Counts. The negotiations ended successfully.

Luther did not have the energy to return to Wittenberg. He died on February 18, 1546 in Eisleben. On his death bed, he prayed “Into your hands, I command my spirit. You have saved me, Father, you faithful God.”

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Luther began by saying,

We want to deal with them in a Christian manner now. Offer them the Christian faith that they would accept the Messiah, who is even their cousin and has been born of their flesh and blood; and is rightly Abraham’s Seed, of which they boast. Even so, I am concerned [that] Jewish blood may no longer become watery and wild. First of all, you should propose to them that they be converted to the Messiah and allow themselves to be baptized, that one may see that this is a serious matter to them. If not, then we would not permit them [to live among us], for Christ commands us to be baptized and believe in Him, even though we cannot now believe so strongly as we should, God is still patient with us.

Luther continued, “However, if they are converted, abandon their usury, and receive Christ, then we will willingly regard them our brothers. Otherwise, nothing will come out of it, for they do it to excess.”

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Luther followed this with accusations,

They are our public enemies. They do not stop blaspheming our Lord Christ, calling the Virgin Mary a whore, Christ, a bastard, and us changelings or abortions (Mahlkälber: “meal calves”). If they could kill us all, they would gladly do it. They do it often, especially those who pose as physicians—though sometimes they help—for the devil helps to finish it in the end. They can also practice medicine as in French Switzerland. They administer poison to someone from which he could die in an hour, a month, a year, ten or twenty years. They are able to practice this art.

He then said,

Yet, we will show them Christian love and pray for them that they may be converted to receive the Lord, whom they should honor properly before us. Whoever will not do this is no doubt a malicious Jew, who will not stop blaspheming Christ, draining you dry, and, if he can, killing [you].

Prayer: Father, forgive us our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us. We cannot take back the things that Luther wrote and said. But we can repent of his legacy, and how it continues to affect Jewish-Christian relations today. Help us to see what needs to be done and call upon others to make restitution and restore broken relationships. As Jewish believers in Yeshua, help us to be a means of forgiveness, reconciliation and peace-building, and to cleanse our own hearts of anger, pain and hurt. In Yeshua’s name, Amen,

This work has been newly translated and published in volume 58 (Sermons V) of Luther’s Works, pages 458–459.

Luther’s Works, Jaroslav Pelikan, Helmut T. Lehmann, Christopher Boyd Brown, Benjamin T.G. Mayes, eds., 75 vols., (Minneapolis: Augsburg Fortress Press; Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1955– ), 58:458–459. A 20 volume extension of the 55 volume collection of Luther’s Works has been begun by Concordia Publishing House: volumes 58, 60, and 68 have been published.

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

Martin Brecht, Martin Luther, 3 vols. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1993), 3:371.

http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Warning_Against_the_Jews_(1546)

[Original German text found in Weimar Ausgabe 51, 194-196, see also Luther’s Works, Christopher Boyd Brown, ed., 75 vols., (Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 2010), 58:458-459].

https://books.google.com/books?id=wrYoAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA431&lpg=PA431&dq=luther+warning+against+the+jews+1546&source=bl&ots=Ka-fyZG_gF&sig=wv5a0pj8E8Qa-vaexk1XOZrAmBo&hl=en&sa=X&ei=3P_jVOCCOZWAygTB_YK4AQ&ved=0CFsQ6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=luther%20warning%20against%20the%20jews%201546&f=false

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17 February 2001 Death of Richard Wurmbrand, Romanian Jewish believer in Yeshua

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Early life

Richard Wurmbrand, the youngest of four boys, was born on March 24, 1909 in Bucharest in a Jewish family. He lived with his family in Istanbul for a short while; his father died when he was 9, and the Wurmbrands returned to Romania when he was 15.

As an adolescent, he became attracted to communism, and, after attending a series of illegal meetings of the Communist Party of Romania (PCdR), he was sent to study Marxism in Moscow, but returned clandestinely the following year. Pursued by Siguranţa Statului (the secret police), he was arrested and held in Doftana prison. Wurmbrand subsequently renounced his political ideals.

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He married Sabina Oster on October 26, 1936. Wurmbrand and his wife became believers in Yeshua in 1938 through the witness of Christian Wolfkes, a Romanian Christian carpenter; they joined the Anglican Mission to the Jews. Wurmbrand was ordained twice – first as an Anglican, then, after World War II, as a Lutheran pastor.

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In 1944, when the Soviet Union occupied Romania as the first step to establishing the communist regime, Wurmbrand began a ministry to his Romanian countrymen and to the Red Army soldiers. When the government attempted to control the churches, he immediately began an “underground” ministry to his people. He was arrested on February 29, 1948, while on his way to church services.

Prison

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Wurmbrand was imprisoned in Craiova, Gherla, the Danube-Black Sea Canal, Văcăreşti, Malmaison, Cluj, and ultimately Jilava, spending three years in solitary confinement. His wife, Sabina, was arrested in 1950 and spent three years of penal labour on the Canal.

Pastor Wurmbrand was released in 1956, after eight and a half years, and, although warned not to preach, resumed his work in the underground church. He was arrested again in 1959, and sentenced to 25 years. During his imprisonment, he was beaten and tortured.

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Eventually, he was the recipient of an amnesty in 1964. Concerned with the possibility of further imprisonment, the Norwegian Mission to the Jews and the Hebrew Christian Alliance negotiated with the Communist authorities for his release from Romania for $10,000. He was convinced by underground church leaders to leave and become a voice for the persecuted church.

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Exile and mission

Wurmbrand traveled to Norway, England, and then the United States. In May 1965, he testified in Washington, D.C. before the US Senate’s Internal Security Subcommittee, taking off his shirt before the committee to show the scars from his torture. He became known as the “The Voice of the Underground Church”, doing much to publicize the persecution of Christians in Communist countries.

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In April 1967, the Wurmbrands formed “Jesus To The Communist World” (later named “The Voice of the Martyrs”), an interdenominational organization working initially with and for persecuted Christians in Communist countries, but later expanding its activities to help persecuted believers in other places, especially in the Muslim world. However, when in Namibia, and confronted with the case of Colin Winter, the Anglican Bishop of Namibia, who had supported African strikers and was eventually deported from Namibia by South Africa, Wurmbrand criticized the latter’s anti-apartheid activism, and claimed resistance to communism was more important.

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In 1990 Richard and Sabina Wurmbrand returned to Romania for the first time in 25 years. The Voice of the Martyrs opened a printing facility and bookstore in Bucharest. He preached about God together with pastor Ioan Panican.

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The Wurmbrands had one son, Mihai. Wurmbrand wrote 18 books in English and others in Romanian. His best-known book is entitled Tortured for Christ, released in 1967. His wife, Sabina, died August 11, 2000.

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Pastor Wurmbrand died on February 17, 2001 in a hospital in Long Beach, California. His last address was in Palos Verdes, California. In 2006, he came fifth among the greatest Romanians according to the Mari Români poll.

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Reflection: I had the privilege of interviewing Richard Wurmbrand and twice hosting a packed out meeting at which he was the speaker. His eyes shone with warmth, wisdom, humour and his powerful faith, but you could see also the pain he had suffered. He challenged us all to take the call to discipleship seriously, and be willing to suffer for our faith.

Prayer: Thank you Lord for the life of Richard Wurmbrand, a modern example of the martyrdom. His testimony through his years of prison, torture and solitary confinement challenge the weakness of our faith in the face of mild apathy and ridicule. Strengthen us we pray, to persevere in adverisity, looking to you, our Risen Messiah. In your name we pray. Amen.

http://torturedforchrist.com/

http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/44578.Richard_Wurmbrand

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

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16 February 1956 Harry Wolfson honoured at National Conference of Christians and Jews #onthisday #otdimjh

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Harry Wolfson was the greatest scholar of Jewish thought of his generation, and although he was not a believer in Yeshua, understood Christian thought better than most Christians. He modeled for Messianic Jews what it means to be fully immersed in both traditions, to be respectful of one another’s differences, and to think philosophically and coherently (he would say ‘systematically’) about the similarities, differences, convergences and divergences between the two faiths. I have chosen to write about him today because Messianic Jews should be more aware of his scholarship and legacy, and seek to emulate his personal character and professional values.

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WOLFSON, HARRY AUSTRYN (November 2, 1887 – September 20, 1974), historian of philosophy. Born in Belorussia, Wolfson received his early education at the Slobodka yeshivah. Emigrating to the United States in 1903, he studied at Harvard and, from 1912 to 1914, held a traveling fellowship from Harvard, which enabled him to study and do research in Europe. In 1915 he was appointed to the Harvard faculty, becoming professor of Hebrew literature and philosophy in 1925. From 1923 to 1925 he also served as professor at the Jewish Institute of Religion. Wolfson received many academic honors for his pioneering researches. He was a fellow of the American Academy for Jewish Research, serving as its president from 1935 to 1937, and a fellow of the Mediaeval Academy of America. He was president of the American Oriental Society in 1957–58, and also held membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 1958 he was awarded the prize of the American Council of Learned Societies. In 1965 the American Academy for Jewish Research published the Harry Austryn Wolfson Jubilee Volume (in English and Hebrew) in his honor.

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Born in a small Russian village in 1887, Harry Wolfson from his childhood became accustomed to living away from home. He was sent off to pursue talmudical studies with various rabbis, and slept on the benches of synagogues and schoolrooms in the different towns. He studied at the seminary in Slobodka. Aware that around him a new doctrine called Marxism was attracting young people, Harry from Austryn (it became his middle name) was impervious to the new creed; his abiding love was for Torah. Then his whole family joined in the migration to the United States in 1903.

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After a spell in Yeshiva preparing for rabbinic ordination, Wolfson became a Hebrew teacher in Scranton, Pennsylvania, where he entered the secular education system, and ended up a Harvard Professor of Jewish thought. Whilst living a non-orthodox lifestyle, he remained a master of Jewish thought, adding to this an encyclopaedic knowledge of Christian and Islamic thought and philosophy.

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His writings are marked by a mastery of the philosophic literature in the several languages in which it was written, penetrating analysis, clarity of exposition, and felicity of style – wrote many books and articles. (A bibliography, appearing in the Jubilee Volume (Eng. sec., pp. 39–49), contains 116 items, which were published between 1912 and 1963.)

His early articles, several of which dealt with issues in the philosophies of Crescas and Spinoza, were followed by his first book, Crescas’ Critique of Aristotle, which, though completed in 1918, was not published until 1929.

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The volume contains a critical edition of part of Crescas’ Or Adonai (the section dealing with the 25 propositions which appear in the introduction to the second part of Maimonides’ Guide), an exemplary English translation, and an introduction; but of special importance are the copious notes which take up more than half of the volume. In these notes Wolfson discusses, with great erudition, the origin and development of the terms and arguments discussed by Crescas, and he clarifies Crescas’ often enigmatic text.

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A reader need only turn to one of the collections of Wolfson’s essays in order to encounter directly the elegance of style, flow of wit, and effusion of charm; the vigorous prologue, the animated epilogue, the exhilarating characterization, the intricately-textured and carefully-cadenced generalization, and the resonant allusion provide a light, soothing ambiance for his philosophic explorations. The fusion of these aspects is seen very clearly in the volume on Crescas, where felicitous translation, exhaustive explication, and enticing conceptualization are combined.

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In the introduction (pp. 24–29) Wolfson describes the “hypothetico-deductive method of textual study” which guided him in all his works (see introductions to his other books). Akin to the method used to study the Talmud known as pilpul, this method rests on the assumptions that any serious author writes with such care and precision that “every term, expression, generalization or exception is significant not so much for what it states as for what it implies,” and that the thought of any serious author is consistent. Hence it becomes the task of the interpreter to clarify what a given author meant, rather than what he said, and he must resolve apparent contradictions by means of harmonistic interpretation. All this requires great sensitivity to the nuances and implications of the text and familiarity with the literature on which a given author drew. Like the scientific method, the “hypothetico-deductive” method proceeds by means of hypotheses which must be proved or disproved, and it must probe the “latent processes” of an author’s thought.

The investigation of the background of Crescas’ thought involved Wolfson in an intensive study of the commentaries on Aristotle’s works written by the Islamic philosopher Averroes. However, most of these commentaries existed only in manuscripts, and so Wolfson proposed the publication of a Corpus Commentarionum Averrois in Aristotelem (in: Speculum, 6 (1931), 412–27; revised version, ibid., 38 (1963), 88–104). This corpus was to consist of critical editions of the Arabic originals, and of the Hebrew and Latin translations; and it was to contain English translations and explanatory commentaries by the editors. The Mediaeval Academy of America undertook to sponsor this project and Wolfson was appointed its editor in chief. By 1971, nine volumes of the series had appeared.

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In 1934 Wolfson’s two-volume The Philosophy of Spinoza appeared. Applying the “hypothetico-deductive” method, Wolfson undertook to unfold “the latent processes” of Spinoza’s reasoning. Following the arrangement of Spinoza’s Ethics, Wolfson explained the content and structure of Spinoza’s thought and discussed extensively the antecedents on which he drew. By the time he had completed his Spinoza, Wolfson had conceived the monumental task of investigating “the structure and growth of philosophic systems from Plato to Spinoza,” working, as he put it, “forwards, sideways, and backwards.” As work on this project progressed, he continued to publish articles.

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His next book, Philo: Foundations of Religious Philosophy in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, appeared in two volumes in 1947 (19482, 19623). Philo had until then been considered an eclectic or a philosophic preacher, but Wolfson undertook to show that behind the philosophic utterances scattered throughout Philo’s writings there lay a philosophic system. More than that, he held that Philo was the founder of religious philosophy in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and that “Philonic” philosophy dominated European thought for 17 centuries until it was destroyed by Spinoza, “the last of the medievals and the first of the moderns.”

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After publishing more articles, Wolfson in 1954 completed another two-volume work, The Philosophy of the Church Fathers (19642). However, he decided to publish only the first volume, which appeared in 1956. Following the pattern established in his Philo, but allowing for differences occasioned by Christian teachings, Wolfson devoted this volume to faith, the Trinity, and the incarnation, discussing not only the orthodox but also the heretical views.

In 1961 a collection of Wolfson’s articles appeared under the title Religious Philosophy: A Group of Essays.

Isidore Twersky writes:

The public academic career and impressive scholarly achievement of Harry Austryn Wolfson, Nathan Littauer Professor of Hebrew Literature and Philosophy at Harvard since 1925, are relatively well known. However, in addition to this Wolfson revelatus—the straightforward success story of a talented, industrious young immigrant and his rise to scholarly fame—there is a Wolfson absconditus—a story, for the most part unknown, of a shy, introspective, sometimes melancholy, former yeshivah student and eminent professor, candidly assessing his own achievement in historical-typological terms, soberly pondering the state of Jewish scholarship and sensitively, sometimes agonizingly, reflecting upon contemporary history and the destiny of Judaism and the Jewish people.

Prayer:(on seeing a scholar) Blessed are you, O LORD our God, who has given wisdom to flesh and blood.

Thank you Lord for the life of scholarship and learning of Harry Wolfson, and the way his was able to combine great scholarship with respect for all. His learning is illustrative of that heavenly wisdom that comes from above, that is pure and peaceable and full of the fruits of righteousness. Lord, we need more scholars of Judaism and Christianity who will accurately reflect our similarities and differences, without polemic and prejudice. Lord, will you raise up men and women of learning, righteousness and godly character, who can as Jewish believers in Yeshua demonstrate his divine and spiritual wisdom in our world today. In Yeshua’s name we pray. Amen.

https://books.google.com/books?id=plHnAf32FeYC&pg=PA94&lpg=PA94&dq=16+February+1956+Harry+Wolfson+honoured&source=bl&ots=r732VvXv_w&sig=5MnWayLNa2_tfhG_xBDlFVDHbnE&hl=en&sa=X&ei=INXhVI-HO8SxyATAkYGQBg&ved=0CCAQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=16%20February%201956%20Harry%20Wolfson%20honoured&f=false

http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0021_0_21063.html

http://americanjewisharchives.org/publications/journal/PDF/1976_28_01_00_feuer.pdf

Click to access Vol_76__1976.pdf

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

https://books.google.com/books?id=plHnAf32FeYC&pg=PA94&lpg=PA94&dq=%2216+February%22+Jewish+Christian&source=bl&ots=r732VqUA1s&sig=ybY9cAF31feDweUGy65JHdAKu-I&hl=en&sa=X&ei=JwjhVKClDaLbsASh4oC4BA&ved=0CDEQ6AEwBDgK#v=onepage&q=%2216%20February%22%20Jewish%20Christian&f=false

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