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Opinion

Ancient antisemitism has risen from the dead

The hateful lies of the early Christians are visible again on placards on the streets of London

May 28, 2021 15:35
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3 min read

My wife sometimes comes to church. Not for religious reasons — she is Jewish, as are our children. But I’m the priest and she comes to support me. And bakes the best Victoria sponge for my congregation.

But her presence makes me more than usually uncomfortable about the sort of things that the New Testament often comes out with concerning “the Jews”. The other Sunday, I was obliged to read out that Jesus-followers were locked into an upper room in Jerusalem “for fear of the Jews” — an odd thing to say given that they were Jews themselves. Perhaps I shouldn’t have read it out, but I did, with inner shame, hoping she wouldn’t notice. She was too polite to mention it.

The Church of England is currently undertaking a review of those monuments in its churches to people with connections to slavery. In the light of Black Lives Matter, glass windows, statues and headstones are all being scrutinised, many of which will be removed. But that’s the easy bit. What is the Church going to do about those passages within its core texts that have been used, for centuries, to justify the persecution of Jews?

And still are. Last weekend, at one of the ‘free Palestine’ demonstrations in London — and amongst those banners likening the state of Israel to the Nazis — there was one that showed an image of Jesus carrying his cross, with the words: “Do not let them do the same thing today again”. Them, eh? The claim that the Jews murdered Jesus has returned from what many of us had hoped was the dustbin of history and was being proudly proclaimed on the streets of London in 2021.