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BENEDICT XVI: NEWS, PAPAL TEXTS, PHOTOS AND COMMENTARY

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The Pope and his Jewish friends:
So near, and yet so far


Benedict XVI will visit the synagogue of Rome soon.
But the more progress is made in dialogue, the more the two faiths see how far apart they are.
One proof: Kippur. For the Jews, it is the most important feast of the year; for Christians, it is identified with Jesus.
[So how is that far apart? Wasn't Jesus all about the Son of God become man to atone for the sins of mankind?]





ROME, September 25, 2009 – On the eve of the Jewish New Year, which was celebrated on September 19 this year, Benedict XVI sent the chief rabbi of Rome, Riccardo Di Segni, a telegram of good wishes and friendship.

In it, he confirmed that he will soon visit the synagogue of Rome, "animated by the profound desire to manifest my personal closeness and that of the whole Catholic Church" to the Jewish community.

The synagogue in Rome will be the third one visited by Benedict XVI, after the synagogue in Cologne in August of 2005 and the Park East synagogue in New York, in April of 2008. Before him, John Paul II had visited the synagogue in Rome on April 13, 1986.

During that same time, there was also a renewed gesture of friendship between the Jews and the Italian Catholic Church. On September 22, Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, president of the bishops' conference, met with the rabbis Di Segni and Giuseppe Laras, the latter of whom is president of the rabbinical assembly of Italy.

And together, they decided to resume the common celebration of the day of Jewish-Christian reflection on January 17, in which the Jews refused to participate last time because of the misunderstandings following the Williamson controversy. [No!! The Italian rabbinical assembly backed out in Nevember 2008 over the Pius XII issues - the Williamson case didn't become public until late January 2009, after the Jan. 17 Day of Judaism! How can Mr. Magister make such a careless factual error?]

The theme of the next common day of reflection will be the fourth commandment in the Jewish numbering: "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy." [Previous years had used the first three, respectively, and successive years will presumably cover the rest of the Decalogue.]

The New Year, Rosh Hashanah, opens the cycle of autumn Jewish feasts. It is followed by Yom Kippur and the feast of Sukkot.

Yom Kippur, or the Day of Expiation, is the most important feast of the entire Jewish liturgical year. This year it will fall on September 28, the third and last day of the visit that Benedict XVI will begin tomorrow in the Czech Republic.

In Rabbi Di Segni's view, the feast of Yom Kippur not only expresses the heart of the Jewish faith, it also reflects the "irreconcilable differences" between this and the Christian faith.

The symbols of Kippur, in fact – the high priest, the temple, the sacrifice, the scapegoat, the absolution of sins – have taken on an entirely new significance in Christianity.

Di Segni explained the Jewish meaning of the feast and its inability to be reconciled with the Christian faith in an article published last year on the front page of L'Osservatore Romano, on the occasion of the previous feast of Kippur.

But after this, L'Osservatore Romano also dedicated space to the other side of the question. Meaning how the New Testament revolutionizes the symbols of Kippur.

The key text in the New Testament is the Letter to the Hebrews. In it, the new and definitive Day of Expiation is the sacrifice of Christ on the cross.

The author of the analysis published by L'Osservatore Romano is an African priest and biblical scholar, Christopher Robert Abeynaike, a Cistercian monk, who wrote on the same topic in the thesis for his doctorate in Sacred Scripture from the Pontifical Biblical Institute, in 2008.

His analysis is highly academic, but also of rare clarity. And it brings to light the essential connection that the Letter to the Hebrews establishes between the sacrifice of Christ, the last supper, and the Eucharistic liturgy.

The following are the two texts on the Jewish and Christian Day of Expiation, by Rabbi Di Segni and by Fr. Abeynaike. An example of dialogue that goes to the heart of the two faiths, and precisely because of this is not afraid of illuminating their differences.

[In the absence so far of a thread on Judaism in this Forum, I am leaving the two articles within this post - I haven't gotten around to it, though I can see it is increasingly as important as keeping track of the Muslims insofar as they impact on Christianity and the Church.]
__________



Kippur, the Day of Expiation
by Riccardo Di Segni
Chief Rabbi of Rome

In the Jewish liturgical calendar, the day of Expiation – Kippùr or Yom Kippùr or Yom ha Kippurìm – is the most important day of the year; in Aramaic, it is yomà, "the day" par excellence, which provides the title for the treatise in the Mishnà that presents the rules for the feast. "The day" falls on the 10th of Tishri, the first month of autumn.

This day is mentioned a number of times in the Bible, and the main source is chapter 16 of Leviticus. There is described a complex ceremonial order presided over by the High Priest, who must cast lots to choose between two goats; one of these, dedicated to the Lord, is offered in sacrifice; the other receives, through a symbolic gesture, the burden of the sins of the whole community, and is then sent off to die in the desert. This is the origin of the expression and concept of "scapegoat." The same biblical passage concludes by explaining that on that day, it is obligatory to mortify oneself and not work, because "on this day atonement is made for you to make you clean, so that you may be cleansed of all your sins before the Lord" (verse 30).

Since the time of its biblical institution, Kippùr has been the day of the year on which sins are remitted and the future destiny of every man is established, after the judgment to which he was subjected in the days before the New Year. Rabbinical tradition has gone to great lengths to explain what sins can be remitted entirely or in part, or suspended, depending on their gravity. The expiatory power of Kippùr is commensurate with the main obligation of man in the days preceding it: the teshuva. Literally, it is the "return," and it is the term indicating repentance, in the sense of returning to the right path. This return involves the realization of having done wrong, the intention of not committing the wrong again, and public, collective confession. All of this is necessarily based on faith in a merciful and compassionate God who reaches out to the one who has done wrong. In any case, the remission of sins refers to those committed within the relationship between man and God; sins among men are remitted only by man. For these reasons, on the eve of Kippùr it is obligatory for everyone to ask forgiveness from the persons he has offended.

As long as the Temple of Jerusalem stood, the ceremonies of the day of Kippùr represented the most complex and solemn liturgical complex. It was only on that day that the High Priest was permitted to enter the Holy of Holies. Respect for the prescribed details was essential, it demanded prolonged and painstaking preparation, and careful execution watched anxiously by the entire community gathered in the Temple. After the destruction of the Temple, only a nostalgic memory of all this remained, which in the liturgy of Kippùr takes place through the reading, in the morning, of the passage from Leviticus, and in the early afternoon with a long poetic evocation of the ceremony.

On this day, the liturgy in the synagogue calls for the highest measure of commitment: long and solemn prayers on the first evening, and a practically uninterrupted ceremony from the following morning until nightfall. The special moments are the reading of supplications, the morning reading of Isaiah 57, which describes true fasting as the practice of justice, and the afternoon reading from the book of Jonah, which is a grandiose representation of the divine mercy. Public attendance at the synagogues reaches its highest point of the year, especially at the most solemn moments of opening and closing.

Personal involvement is essential in Kippùr, especially with a total fast without eating or drinking anything for about 25 hours – from which the sick are exempted – together with other forms of abstention (from bathing, using perfumed creams, wearing leather shoes, sexual relations). Then there is the family and social dimension, in the meals preceding and following the fast and in family gatherings at the Synagogue to receive the priestly blessing, imparted by the Kohanim, the descendents of Aaron.

In spite of the austerity, the solemnity, and the forms of physical affliction that are imposed, Kippùr is lived collectively with serenity and joy, in the knowledge that the divine mercy will not fail.

At the conclusion of these brief explanatory notes, considering the authoritative and certainly unusual venue in which they are being published ["L'Osservatore Romano"], it may be interesting to propose a reflection on the meaning that Kippùr had, and can have today, in Jewish-Christian encounter. This is because in the formation of the Christian liturgical calendar, Jewish origins had a decisive role as a model to be taken up and transformed with new meanings: the moving of the weekly day of rest from Saturday to Sunday, Easter, and Pentecost. In some cases, the Church has even commemorated the observance of typically Jewish precepts (the feast of the Purification on February 2; in former times, the Circumcision on January 1).

But the entire autumn cycle, of which Kippùr is the most important day, has been practically eliminated. This is probably due to the fact that the symbols of Kippùr concern some irreconcilable differences between the two worlds. The themes of the high priesthood, the Temple, the sacrifice, the scapegoat, the remission of sins, which in the Jewish tradition come together in Kippùr, have been refashioned by the Church, but outside of their original unity. To simplify the opposing positions: a Christian, on the basis of the principles of his faith, no longer needs Kippùr, just as a Jew who has Kippùr has no need of the salvation from sin proposed by the Christian faith.

(From "L'Osservatore Romano," October 8, 2008).


The essence of the Eucharistic celebration
according to the New Testament:
Last supper and sacrifice

by Christopher Robert Abeynaike


The Letter to the Hebrews contains what may be considered a genuine commentary on the actions and words of Christ at the last supper. This statement may be surprising at first, since the author of the Letter to the Hebrews does not seem to make explicit and direct reference to the last supper.

The author of the Letter to the Hebrews is the only writer in the New Testament who attributes to Christ the titles of "priest" – or, rather, "high priest" – and of "mediator of the New Covenant." The author, as a Jew steeped in Old Testament thought, in fact reinterprets the salvific action of Christ in the context of two important events or ceremonies from the past: the inauguration of the first covenant by Moses on Mount Sinai, and the ceremony of the purification of the people from their sins carried out each year by the Levitical high priest on the great Day of Expiation, Kippur.

Both of the ceremonies were based on animal sacrifice. In the first, Moses ratified God's covenant with the people of Israel by sprinkling the people with the blood from the sacrificial victims, and pronouncing the words "Behold the blood of the covenant" (Exodus 24:8; Hebrews 9:18-22).

In the second ceremony, on the other hand, the high priest, after sacrificing the victims, took their blood and entered alone into the sanctuary – the "Holy of Holies" – where he sprinkled the blood, thus carrying out the expiation of the sins of the people (Leviticus 16; Hebrews 9:6-10). But according to what our author says, "it is impossible that the blood of bulls and goats take away sins" (Hebrews 10:4), and therefore these sacrifices remained ineffective, not capable of giving the desired access to God, blocked by the awareness of sin (Hebrews 9:6-10).

The author of the letter to the Hebrews, in any case, found in the Scriptures the foretelling of:

- a new priest – "The Lord has sworn and will not waver: 'Like Melchizedek you are a priest forever' (Psalm 110:4);

- a new sacrifice – "Sacrifice and offering you do not want; but ears open to obedience you gave me. Holocausts and sin-offerings you do not require; so I said, 'Here I am; your commands for me are written in the scroll. To do your will is my delight" (Psalm 40:7-9);

- a new covenant – "The days are coming, says the LORD, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah. It will not be like the covenant I made with their fathers. For I will forgive their evildoing and remember their sin no more" (Jeremiah 31:31-34).

He saw Christ as this new priest, who would offer a new sacrifice consisting of his own body, thus inaugurating a new covenant.

So then, summing up the substance of his teaching, he says: "But when Christ came as high priest of the good things that have come to be [. . .] he entered once for all into the sanctuary [of heaven], not with the blood of goats and calves but with his own blood, thus obtaining eternal redemption. [. . .] The blood of Christ, who through the eternal spirit offered himself unblemished to God, [will] cleanse our consciences from dead works to worship the living God. For this reason he is mediator of a new covenant" (Hebrews 9:11-15).

At this point we must pose a question. Where in the life of Christ could our author have seen him in the role of high priest, in the act of offering a sacrifice for the expiation of sins, and, at the same time, in the role of mediator of the new covenant in the act of inaugurating this covenant? In all probability, at the Last Supper, where Christ had pronounced the words: "This is my blood of the covenant, which will be shed on behalf of many for the forgiveness of sins" (Matthew 26:28).

In fact, in saying the words "This is my blood of the covenant," Christ manifested himself as the mediator of a covenant founded on his own blood, and therefore counterposed to the one inaugurated by Moses with the words "Behold the blood of the covenant" (Exodus 24:8).

In adding the words "shed on behalf of many for the forgiveness of sins," he was implying that the covenant that he was inaugurating was precisely the New Covenant proclaimed by Jeremiah, in which the remission of sins would be assured: "For I will forgive their evildoing and remember their sin no more" (31:34).

Moreover, the words: "my blood shed on behalf of many for the forgiveness of sins" – where the idea of a sacrifice for the expiation of the sins of the people is extremely clear – could not have helped but remind our author of the sacrifice offered by the Levitical high priest on the great Day of Expiation.

With the death of Jesus after this and his ascension into the invisibility of heaven – "He entered once for all into the sanctuary" (Hebrews 9:12) – the author would have been struck by the parallel with the action of the Levitical high priest, who after immolating the victims entered into the invisibility of the earthly sanctuary in order to carry out the expiation of sins by sprinkling the sacrificial blood.

We can therefore affirm that the last supper was precisely the moment in Christ's life in which the author of the Letter to the Hebrews could have recognized him as the new high priest, and, at the same time, as mediator of the New Covenant.

The words of Jesus over the chalice alone would have been sufficient for this. While the words over the bread – "This is my body" – must have reminded the author of the prophecy of the Psalms, of a new kind of sacrifice in contrast with the sacrifices of the Old Covenant: "you did not want sacrifice or offering, but a body you have prepared for me. Behold, I come to do your will, O God" (Psalm 40:7-9).

The author of the letter, in fact, comments in this regard: "By this 'will', we have been consecrated through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all" (Hebrews 10:10).

Finally, the bread and wine of the last supper, the same gifts offered by Melchizedek (Genesis 14:18), would only have confirmed for our author that the new priest, by manifesting himself in the offering of his body at supper, was precisely – in fulfillment of the prophecy of Psalm 110:4 – the priest "like Melchizedek."

In conclusion, we can say that when the author of the Letter to the Hebrews – in the heart of his epistle, in verses 11-15 of chapter 9 – speaks of the manifestation of Christ as the new high priest, through the offering of himself to God for the purification of the sins of the people, and, at the same time, as mediator of the New Covenant, he is referring to the words and actions of Jesus at the last supper.

The words immediately following confirm this: "For this reason he is mediator of a new covenant (diathéke): since a death has taken place for deliverance from transgressions under the first covenant, those who are called may receive the promised eternal inheritance. Now where there is a will (diathéke), the death of the testator must be established. For a will (diathéke) takes effect only at death; it has no force while the testator is alive. Thus not even the first covenant (diathéke) was inaugurated without blood" (Hebrews 9:15-18).

In these verses, the author is playing on the double meaning of the Greek word "diathéke," used in the version of the Septuagint to translate the Hebrew word "berith," covenant, while in contemporary Greek it meant a will.

He is, in fact, using an example taken from everyday life. Just as a "diathéke," a will, becomes valid only at the death of the testator, so also the "diathéke," the covenant proclaimed by Jesus, had to be followed by his death for its ratification, just as the first covenant was dedicated with the sprinkling of the blood of the victims.

But beyond having in common the same Greek word "diathéke," a covenant and a will have something else in common: the concept of an inheritance.

Under the first covenant, the inheritance coincided with the possession of the land of Canaan. But under the New Covenant, the inheritance becomes the possession of the kingdom of God. Therefore, we find Christ who at the last supper manifests himself not only in the roles of priest and mediator of a New Covenant, but also in the role of testator who gives his apostles the promise of possessing the kingdom of God: "I tell you, from now on I shall not drink this fruit of the vine until the day when I drink it with you new in the kingdom of my Father" (Matthew 26:29; Luke 22:29-30).

Therefore, our author had grounds for saying: "For this reason he is mediator of a new covenant (diathéke): since a death has taken place for deliverance from transgressions under the first covenant, those who are called may receive the promised eternal inheritance" (Hebrews 9:15).

As the result of our study, we can affirm that the last supper was:

- a sacrifice in which Christ "offered himself to God" (Hebrews 9:14) for the remission of sins;

- the promulgation of the New Covenant by Christ;

- the disposition of a will, in which Jesus left in "eternal inheritance" (Hebrews 9:15) to his disciples the kingdom of his Father (Matthew 26:29; Luke 22:29-30).

For all three reasons, his death on the cross inevitably had to follow. All of the words and actions of Christ at the last supper were, in fact, predicated on their fulfillment in his death, without which they would have had no meaning or value.

But the death of Jesus did not have to be the end of his work of redemption. Just as, in fact, the culminating moment of the ceremony on the day of expiation was the entry of the Levitical high priest with the sacrificial blood into the earthly sanctuary in order to bring to fulfillment the expiation of sins, so also Christ in his ascension entered into the heavenly sanctuary "that he might now appear before God on our behalf." (Hebrews 9:24), "thus obtaining eternal redemption" (Hebrews 9:12). Precisely because Christ "through the eternal spirit offered himself" (Hebrews 9:14), his sacrifice has an eternal efficacy, and He remains "high priest forever according to the order of Melchizedek" (Hebrews 6:20).

We therefore have, we might say, a "Day of Expiation" that lasts forever, to which the author refers when he says: "The blood of Christ [will] cleanse our consciences from dead works to worship the living God" (Hebrews 9:14). And again: "Therefore, brothers, since through the blood of Jesus we have confidence of entrance into the [heavenly] sanctuary, and since we have 'a great priest over the house of God', let us approach . . ." (Hebrews 10:19-22).

On another occasion, the author speaks of Christians as a people who have approached "Mount Zion and the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and God the judge of all, and Jesus, the mediator of a new covenant, and the sprinkled blood" (Hebrews 12:22-24). The "blood of Jesus" is for our author an overarching symbol indicating the fruits of the redemption, meaning those goods to which Christians have access, an access that from the context of these passages can be seen as referring to the Eucharistic celebration.

The enduring redemptive work of Christ, which the author of the letter to the Hebrews expresses with the symbol of the continual sprinkling with his blood, can be found expressed in another way in the liturgical prayer in which it is stated that every time the Mass is celebrated, "the work of our redemption is carried out" (cf. "Presbyterorum Ordinis" 13). In the passages referred to above, we can also note that, during the Eucharistic celebration, Christians in a certain way seem to transcend the boundaries of this world and approach, by means of Christ, God and the heavenly world.

Finally, the Eucharist is also a sacrificial banquet, to which our author refers in saying: "We have an altar from which those who serve the tabernacle have no right to eat" (Hebrews 13:10). St. Paul clarifies the meaning of these words when, in the first Letter to the Corinthians (10:14-22), he compares the Eucharist to both the sacrificial meals in the Old Testament (Leviticus 7), and to those of the pagans, affirming that eating sacrificial flesh necessarily implies entering into communion (koinonía) with the divinity to which the sacrifice has been offered. He therefore prohibits Christians from participating in the body and blood of Christ at the Eucharistic table, and, at the same time, continuing to participate in the sacrificial meals of the pagans.

John, in his Gospel, further develops the Pauline concept of the communion with the body and blood of Christ, saying, "Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood remains in me and I in him. Just as the living Father sent me and I have life because of the Father, so also the one who feeds on me will have life because of me" (6:56-57). By eating the body and drinking the blood of Christ, the Christian is assumed into the communion of life of the Father and the Son, right now, on this earth. It seems that this is the same concept that the author of the letter to the Hebrews is trying to express when he says – in the context of the Eucharistic celebration, using the language of the Old Testament – that Christians approach, through Christ, the heavenly sanctuary and the presence of God.

This study on the teaching of the New Testament concerning the Eucharistic celebration shows us how great and profound is the mystery that it contains. The Eastern fathers rightly called it "sacrificium tremendum."

It is clear that the manner in which the Eucharist is celebrated – the "ars celebrandi" – must always be in harmony with its true substance, and must fully reflect this to the participants. This is, in fact, the main preoccupation of Benedict XVI, and must also be the preoccupation of all the pastors of the Church, bishops and priests, in a particular way during the Year for Priests now in progress, since, as Vatican Council II reminds us, "Priests exercise their sacred function especially in the Eucharistic worship" (Lumen Gentium 28).

(From "L'Osservatore Romano," July 24, 2009)?

[Modificato da TERESA BENEDETTA 28/09/2009 16:52]
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