Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Aspects of religions (non-Christian) > Theology
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Opening the Covenant - A Jewish Theology of Christianity (Hardcover, New)
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Opening the Covenant - A Jewish Theology of Christianity (Hardcover, New)
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The Vatican II Council of 1965 signaled a new era in the
relationship of the Jewish and Christian faiths. Determined to free
the Church of the anti-Jewish polemic which led to such widespread
suffering of the innocent, Catholic authorities completely revised
their conceptions of Jews and Judaism. Soon, many mainstream
Protestant churches also issued a series of official statements
that affirm the eternal nature of God's ancient covenant with
Israel. An entirely new category of theology emerged as part of the
developing Jewish-Christian dialogue, and gradually Jewish
theologians began to respond. Opening The Covenant represents a
significant advance in Jewish thinking about Christianity. Michael
Kogan delves deeply into the theologies of the two faiths to locate
precise points of difference and convergence. He sees Christianity
as the breaking open of the original Covenant to include gentile
peoples. God has brought this about, says Kogan, through the work
of Jesus and his interpreters. If Christianity is a divinely
inspired movement, then Judaism must reevaluate its truth-claims.
This will in no way compromise the truth of Judaism itself but will
cause Jews to understand their own faith more fully by locating it
in the larger context of God's universal redemptive plan. Kogan
calls for each tradition to receive the wisdom of the other as a
means of self-understanding. Once each faith is freed to find God's
purpose in the other, the way will be open to a liberating
pluralism in which Jews and Christians come to see each other as
Israelite siblings sharing a universal role as God's witnesses, the
builders of God's Kingdom on earth. Neither faith can do this
world-redemptive work alone. Kogan argues that an affirmation of
one's own religion can still provide space for the truth of the
"other," and presents a theory of multiple revelations of truth
flowing from the one God of all.
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