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Ed. Ronda Chervin, Ph.D., is a professor of philosophy, and writer of numerous books on Catholic living. With Msgr. Eugene Kevane, David Moss, and others, she helped found the AHC in the U.S. This review first appeared in The Hebrew Catholic #79.
A Review by Ronda Chervin, Ph.D. Can anything good for Catholics come from M.I.T. and Harvard Business School? This is only one of the many surprises for readers of a fresh synthesis of salvation history in relation to Jews and Catholics just out from Ignatius Press. Written by a former Jewish Harvard Business professor with a spectacular conversion story to the Catholic faith, Salvation is From the Jews explores Gods Providence for the Jewish people in ways that enlighten, inspire and thrill the soul of the Hebrew Catholic. Sceptical? Have you read more than enough and cant absorb anything more? That's the way I, a Hebrew Catholic for more than 40 years and editor of conversion story books (The Ingrafting and Bread from Heaven), felt when Roy Schoemans manuscript arrived for an endorsement. About 30 pages into it, I stopped reading in a desultory manner, and, at the edge of my seat, started praying while turning the pages faster and faster. I liked the popular but thorough and solid style of the book. To whet your appetite here are some ideas in the book new to me: God wanted the Jews of Old Testament times to be totally separate from the Gentiles because the pagan gods (idols) were not superstitions, but were demonic spirits. Many Jews claim that events after the time of Christ do not fit the Jewish Scriptures prophecies of what would happen when the Messiah came, thus thinking they can prove Jesus was not the Messiah. Schoeman shows, as other apologists do, that this can be explained by taking into account that some of the prophecies refer to Christs Second Coming rather than his first, while others refer to spiritual events not visible in the physical world. What was new to me was the application of this principle to the immediate and radical release of the dead from limbo. As for Jews claiming that Christian views of the afterlife are alien to Judaism, Maimonides, the great Jewish philosopher of the Middle Ages, labeled as atheists and unbelievers unworthy to belong to the Jewish community anyone who failed to believe with perfect faith in the resurrection of the dead. Schoeman masterfully summarizes the evidence of Hitlers involvement with Satanism and how closely allied to Hitler were the mentors of men like Saddam Hussein and Yassar Arafat. The quote that shocked me the most was from a letter moderate Anwar Sadat wrote to Hitler after the war, when Sadat mistakenly thought Hitler was still alive:
In 1953 Sadat wrote that Hitler had been falsely demeaned. On the contrary, Sadat wrote that Hitler had been great in trying to save the world from this malignant evil (the Jews). Schoeman, carefully distinguishing between defined teachings of the Church and speculation, asks the reader to consider the possibility that Satan, knowing that the Second Coming must be preceded by the conversion of the Jewish people, inspired the Holocaust with the intent to either eliminate the Jews entirely or, failing that, to ensure that the survivors would associate Christianity with Nazism. Might today's attempts by contemporary Arab leaders to eliminate the Jewish state be the next phase in his campaign to avert the Second Coming? Orthodox Jews who went to their deaths during the Nazi holocaust retained hope to the end far more often than less religious Jews. One such orthodox Jew proclaimed in the face of despair:
The train that carried St. Edith Stein to the concentration camp was composed entirely of baptized Jews. A key to the meaning of Judaism post the Resurrection of Jesus is the intriguing passage from St. Paul (in Romans 11:16-24) concerning the ingrafting of the Gentiles onto the tree with Jewish roots. After a fascinating analysis of the use of the word seed in Scripture, Schoeman concludes that the Jews retain the blessing by nature because they are the seed, while the Gentiles receive the blessing by choice.
Since Jews have a horror of assimilation, some contemporary Catholics think that it is right for them to stay separate. Schoeman suggests that those Jews who choose to disappear into the Church might be seen as like yeast that is kept separate from the dough until its right time comes when it disappears into the bread.
Schoeman relates the Holocaust to the Second Coming in this way:
A beautiful chapter about famous Jewish converts provides inspiration from the writings of Alphonse Ratisbonne, Rabbi Zolli, Cardinal Lustiger, and Charles Rich. The book also includes the miraculous story of Schoemans own finding of Christ and His Church already excerpted in The Hebrew Catholic (#78). Why do I think Hebrew Catholic members of the AHC and readers of The Hebrew Catholic need to get hold of Salvation is From the Jews and read the whole book? When you are witnessing to your own conversion to other Jews, you will find that there are many questions they have that you are not sure how to answer. Salvation is From the Jews provides a vision that is so appreciative of the Jewish role in religious history, that your relatives and friends may be more open to it than your own direct confrontation of them. When you run up against false theories among Catholics such as you may not have as much background information as Roy Schoeman to answer them. How about your own doubts and perplexities about just where to place yourself in the on-going outreach to see our people find Jesus in the Church? Salvation is From the Jews leads you down paths that will help you discern. | ||||
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