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Opinion

The elephant in the church

There is no real understanding between the two religions, especially regarding who Jesus was and how he was killed, writes James Jeffrey

March 31, 2021 15:30
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5 min read

So Pilate asked them again, ‘What then do you want me to do with the One you call the King of the Jews?’ And they shouted back, ‘Crucify Him!’ ‘Why?’ asked Pilate. ‘What evil has He done?’ But they shouted all the louder, ‘Crucify Him!’”

This Good Friday, that New Testament passage is ringing out in Catholic and Anglican churches just before Easter. I’ve heard it every year for decades. For many churchgoers, it’s the primary exposure they get to Jewish people, especially the sort of worshipper that only goes to mass on the big feast days.

It’s clearly not a very flattering picture of Jews. But it was such a repeated given in the liturgical calendar and lifecycle — the Jews crucified Christ and the rest is Christian history — that I never really thought about it much. Until the Labour Party’s recent problems with antisemitism. Initially, I really was stumped: How could this still be an issue on this scale in modern Britain?

But then I recalled how when I went to a Catholic prep school as an eight-year-old near the end of the 1980s, the banter at the sweet shop routinely involved sayings such as “Don’t be a Jew”, or “Don’t be such a Yid”, if you declined to share your Apple Jack sweets or fizzy cola bottles.