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Opinion

Jesus the Palestinian, a political messiah

February 1, 2014 07:29
3 min read

After the £30,000 replica wall of Bethlehem came down in the courtyard of St James’s Church Piccadilly, just before the Quakers sent their 12th year of Ecumenical Accompaniers into Palestinian villages at a cost of over £5,000 per observer, and right around the time that the Methodist Church engaged a cadre of its leading ministers and its top staffer on poverty and justice, for months of consultation on a full boycott of Israel, my 10-year-old daughter asked me why Christians hated Israel.

Though I don’t recall my answer, I have been gnawing over her question. Or, rather, this version of it: why are certain churches willing to spend so much time, energy and money on criticising the Jewish state?
The answer, I think, is that many Christians believe that Jesus Christ is a Palestinian.

This may strike you as absurd; after all, Jesus was a Jewish man, born from a Jewish mother, who lived and preached to Jews in the Galilee some 2,000 years ago. No one rationally disputes these details. But details do not a belief make, and the deeper I venture into the rabbit-hole of liberal church dogmatics, things indeed become curiouser and curiouser. I do not wish to be flippant or offensive with the term Jesus and the sensitive theological complications that arise when a rabbi employs this name in public discourse. I simply have no other plausible explanation for the sneer I encounter in certain church circles when we talk about Israel. Let me explain through some all-too frequent illustrations why I have reached this conclusion.

Exhibit A: A picture of Joseph and the pregnant Mary attempting to enter Bethlehem surrounded by That Wall. A large picture in this same set adorns the mantelpiece in the office of the rector of St James Piccadilly. I found this image quite distressing, and spent most of my time in the rector’s office just staring at it.

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