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Mordecai Would Not Bow Down - Anti-Semitism, the Holocaust, and Christian Supersessionism (Hardcover)
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Mordecai Would Not Bow Down - Anti-Semitism, the Holocaust, and Christian Supersessionism (Hardcover)
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"Never again!" In the years following the Holocaust, the phrase
came to signify a general determination never again to permit
systemic anti-Semitism and genocidal violence. Yet anti-Semitism
endures, and its underlying causes persist. The resilience of
anti-Semitism casts the Holocaust not as inexplicable or singular,
but as an event shaped by identifiable-and universal-human
prejudices. Despite the intense attention focused on the Holocaust,
we consistently misrepresent it. By describing it as a purely
irrational phenomenon, we risk minimizing the threat that
anti-Semitism continues to pose. Instead, we must identify and
acknowledge its causes, which are not only political, economic, and
pseudoscientific but ideological as well. Taking its title from the
Book of Esther, Mordecai Would Not Bow Down investigates these
ideological causes. Timothy P. Jackson argues that the Jewish
victims of the Holocaust were persecuted for their belief in one
God who is the sole Creator of a moral order centered in
selflessness and love. Judaic teachings about the importance of
caring for the weak and vulnerable overtly contradicted the Nazis'
"natural" lust for power and enjoyment of cruelty, which further
fueled their anti-Semitism. By analyzing the ideological clash
between Nazism and Judaism, Jackson reveals the ways in which
Christianity was complicit in the Holocaust-specifically, the role
of Christian supersessionism: the belief that the New Covenant
supplants or erases the Old Covenant, making Christians and not
Jews God's elect. Supersessionism has historically enabled
Christian anti-Semitic violence. Yet Judaism and Christianity are
ultimately complementary in their shared origins and analogous
aims: the Law that saves the Jews and the Gospel that saves the
Gentiles are of a piece. God's choosing the Jewish people to embody
collectively a message of fellowship and moral responsibility is
parallel to God's calling on Jesus to save humanity individually.
Moreover, both divine vocations often engender demonic resentment.
Recognizing that Auschwitz and Calvary are but two sites of the
same murderous despair is an important step toward eliminating the
pervasive menace of anti-Semitism.
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