This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Jayjg (talk | contribs) at 23:41, 24 August 2009 (fix refs). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 23:41, 24 August 2009 by Jayjg (talk | contribs) (fix refs)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)While many of the members of the Unification Church take a generally pro-Jewish, pro-Israel stance, the church has been a subject to allegations of antisemitism concerning its teachings concerning the Jews.
Rabbi A. James Rudin has said that there is a pattern of "unrelieved hostility to the Jewish people" in Moon's Divine Principle, including stereotypes and notions of collective guilt long condemned by mainstream Christian denominations. Unification Church theologian Johnny Sonneborn issued a rebuttal, stating "Divine Principle is less harsh than Jewish Scripture, as it emphasizes the repentance of the people and God's love and grace, where Moses in Deuteronomy remembers only the 'rebelliousness.'"
The Rudin report
According to Jews and Judaism in Rev. Moon's Divine Principle, a report issued by the American Jewish Committee (AJC) in 1976, "every time Rev. Moon mentions Jews or Israelites he portrays them collectively as reprobate, with evil intentions."
The controversy raised by the AJC centers on passages found in Divine Principle, the church's theology textbook. Rabbi A. James Rudin, Assistant Director of the Interreligious Affairs Department of the American Jewish Committee, wrote:
- An analysis of this document reveals an orientation of almost unrelieved hostility toward the Jewish people, exemplified in pejorative language, stereotyped imagery, and accusations of collective sin and guilt.
- Whether he is discussing the "Israelites" of the Hebrew Bible or the "Jews" as referred to in writings of the New Testament period, Moon portrays their behavior as reprobate, their intentions as evil (often diabolical), and their religious mission as eclipsed.
- There are over 36 specific references in Divine Principle to the Israelites of the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament); each one is pejorative. For example, the "faithlessness" of the Israelites is mentioned four times on a single page (p. 330).
Unification Church response
Unification Church theologian Johnny Sonneborn issued a rebuttal to the Rudin report, stating "Divine Principle is less harsh than Jewish Scripture, as it emphasizes the repentance of the people and God's love and grace, where Moses in Deuteronomy remembers only the 'rebelliousness.'"
Church leaders in 1976 took out full-page newspaper ads to call attention to the church's pro-Jewish and pro-Israeli stance. In the ad Sun Myung Moon was quoted as saying:
In the course of their history the people of Israel and Korea have experienced suffering and persecutions by neighboring enemies and expanding imperialistic powers.
As a son of the Korean people, living in this blessed by God land of America, I extend to you, Jewish Brethren, my hand of friendship and wish to state the principles which are guiding the activities of our Movement, especially those regarding the problems and difficulties confronting the Jews of the World and Israel at this crucial juncture of our common human history.
1. The Unification Movement categorically condemns anti- Semitism, the most hideous, abject and cruel form of hatred. We regard the murder of six million Jews in Europe the result of political short-sightedness and lack of moral responsibility on the part of Germany's political and religious leaders, and statesmen from among other nations, in the period between the Two World Wars.
Ignoring the basic teachings of the Scriptures, they acted too late to block Hitler's ascent to power, they postponed the action for his downfall, and they did nothing to rescue the victims who were the captives of his satanic plans and designs.
Only a unified front of all Christian and Jewish forces, inspired by the principles of the Divine Commandments and guided by the concept of human brotherhood, would have been able to prevent the Holocaust, the implementation of the "Final Solution," -- a Cain-inspired action, carried out by the Nazis between 1933 and 1945.
2. The Unification Movement recognizes the divine and natural right of the Jewish people to physical survival and preservation of its specific religious traditions, the marks of its distinctive historical entity. These fundamental human rights must be secured everywhere, especially for Jews living in the lands of the Diaspora.
3. The Unification Movement regards the Land of Israel as a haven for the Holocaust survivors and sanctuary for all those individual Jews who are trying to escape physical persecution and religious, racial or national oppression. The demand for free emigration--the undeniable and inalienable right of every human being--must become the stated policy of the United States in her dealings with foreign countries, and particularly in her relations with the Soviet Union.
4. The Unification Movement, in its efforts to resolve conflicts among nations and harmonize antagonistic social- economic and political interests, will work toward the creation of political conditions necessary for an acceptable accommodation between the Arabs and Jews, and to achieve a genuine and lasting peace in the Middle East, one of the most important corners of the world.
5. The Unification Movement believes that religious and free people throughout the world must cooperate in building a spiritual and organizational unity among nations which will be capable to contain Soviet imperialism, which continues to inflict hardship and suffering upon its own people and is spreading the poison of hatred and dissension among nations of the world, with the ultimate purpose of political global subjugation and enslavement.
6. The Unification Movement is grateful to God, to His true and righteous prophets and saints of our common spiritual tradition who prepared the foundations on which we stand and organize our struggle. We consider ourselves to be the younger brother of our Jewish and Christian brethren, all of whom are children of our Heavenly Father. We regard it as our duty to respect and serve the elder sons of our Father, and it is our mission to serve Judaism and Christianity by promoting Love and Unity among all the children of God.
7. The Unification Movement teaches the Principle and strives toward the establishment of a Unified World Family of Nations guided by the concepts of Unity and Brotherhood expressed in the Divine Commandments, the foundations of our common spiritual heritage. It is our conviction that we must unite in order to attain this Divine and Sublime Historical Objective.
Sandon's view
In 1978 Leo Sandon Jr. discussed Jewish-Unification Church relations in Theology Today and concluded I suspect that the American Jewish community's sensitivity to the Unification Church is based not so much on doctrinal anti-semitism as on the understandable nervous reaction Jewish folk inevitably have to any high intensity religious movement which is serious about proselytism. We have a de facto "live and let live" policy in the American religious establishment and the Moonists violate that arrangement.
See also
- Judeo-Christian
- Christianity and Judaism
- Antisemitism
- Supersessionism
- Christian Zionism
- Christianity and antisemitism
- Jewish Christians
- Mormonism and Judaism
- Unification Church of the United States
- Indemnity (Unification Church)
External links and references
- ^ Rudin, A. James, 1978 A View of the Unification Church, American Jewish Committee Archives
- Korean Moon: Waxing or Waning?, Theology Today, July 1978