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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3710810.stm
Anne Catherine Emmerich's The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ is a work that is far more explicit in its efforts to blame the Jews for "killing Christ," than Gibson's film derived from it. It is riddled from cover to cover with anti-semitic slurs (and yes, I've cracked the cover on this dreck).
That this pope would beatify this woman really does give the lie to his earlier ecumenical efforts, and makes clearer than any false words offered up at the wailing wall that the Catholic Church's position with respect to the Jews has not changed one whit since the days of Chrysostom, Augustine, or the Inquisition.
Anne Catherine Emmerich's The Dolorous Passion of Our Lord Jesus Christ is a work that is far more explicit in its efforts to blame the Jews for "killing Christ," than Gibson's film derived from it. It is riddled from cover to cover with anti-semitic slurs (and yes, I've cracked the cover on this dreck).
That this pope would beatify this woman really does give the lie to his earlier ecumenical efforts, and makes clearer than any false words offered up at the wailing wall that the Catholic Church's position with respect to the Jews has not changed one whit since the days of Chrysostom, Augustine, or the Inquisition.
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Date: 2004-10-03 10:36 pm (UTC)Oh, and point of information: there were no Israelis prior to 1948. There were, however Israelites and, later, Jews.
Also, I would be very interested in learning what a Catechism published prior to Vatican II would have to say on the matter. "Always and Everywhere" can be surprisingly relative terms when looked at against the facts of the past.
Bear in mind that Luther, for all his disagreements with the Church, was Catholic. He was indeed horribly anti-Judaic, but that was not so much an aberration as one would like to think.
And now, I'm going to recommend a book to you: Sister Mary Boys' Has God Only One Blessing? There are few Christians engaging in Jewish/Christian dialogue who have as solid an understanding of the problems presented by the genre to which Emmerich's work belongs, as she does; though I cannot recall whether she cites Emmerich's work explicitly. It was really Gibson who propelled Emmerich to contemporary fame.
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Date: 2004-10-04 02:00 pm (UTC)I know that Luther started out Catholic, but you can't deny that he abandoned the Catholic Church. By an already existing definition (thanks to the schism with the Orthodox Church), a Catholic would recognize at least partial authority of the Church in Rome. He also started out more tolerant of Jews, from what I read earlier this year.
It hadn't occurred to me that "Israeli" applied strictly to people from the political nation rather than to the tribe. Thanks for the reminder.
From what the paper tells me in brief, Emmerich is getting beatified not for her visions of, among other things, devils talking among Jews (which would not be unique to that culture) but for her general virtue in life, as evidenced by her persistence in the face of persecution.