Rabbi
Joseph Soloveitchik on Interreligious Dialogue - 40 Years Later:
One
Catholics Reflections
Philip A. Cunningham
I would like to begin with some introductory comments. First, I am acutely aware that todays conversation is one within the Orthodox Jewish community. I am an eavesdropper overhearing a discussion of great personal interest and that to some degree discusses me. But I can offer an outsiders perspective only because of the graciousness of the primary speakers.
Second, I sincerely am quite honored to share a panel with three such òòò½Ö±²¥ Jewish friends. I hope my own comments as a Roman Catholic will make some contribution to this intriguing conversation.
Third, I am painfully conscious, even if I do not
constantly refer to it, of the sinful collective behavior of my own faith
community toward the Jewish people over the past millennium. One
of the Christian criteria that could be brought to bear regarding anothers
religious legitimacy is the Matthean statement that by their fruits you shall
know them (Mt
Having voiced these caveats, I think my proper role today takes two forms. I can comment directly on remarks that the panel has made on Christianity and most especially on the Catholic Church. I can also raise general questions that have occurred to me upon overhearing the discussion in the hopes that such queries from an outsiders perspective might open up the conversation even further.
Some Specific Remarks on the Catholic Church and the
Second
All three speakers have commented on the post-Second
Vatican Council reforms that are underway in my own faith community. Whether
these reforms to date ought to affect the application of Rabbi Soloveitchiks
ideas among Jews today is not for me to say. What
I can say is that our efforts over the
past four decades are, as Cardinal Walter Kasper said last year here at
I would stress that the aim of the post-Vatican II reform is not only to encourage dialogue between Jews and Catholics. It is also to root out utterly among Christians the supersessionist idea that the Church had replaced Jews as Gods covenanted people. This notion is so woven into the fabric of Christian history and theology that Rabbi Soloveitchik was, in my opinion, quite correct to discourage theological conversation with the community of the many on such terms.
It is impossible for Christians to articulate the history
and religious contours of our faith without reference to Jews and Judaism
because we originated as a distinct community in the words and deeds of late
So I would question, as one with some experience of the internal dynamics of the Catholic conversation, Rabbi Korns description of three current Catholic positions about Judaism and salvation. He had identified these as (a) the views of the authors of Reflections on Covenant and Mission; (b) the views of Cardinal Walter Kasper; and (c) the views of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger. In my opinion, his first two categories are not separate. Cardinal Kasper desires a fuller treatment of relevant soteriological issues that were not the main topic of the Reflections, but agrees that Jews are in a saving covenant with God and that the Catholic Church has no offices devoted to converting Jews. However, to explain this further would get us into esoterica of Catholic theology that are tangential to todays topic.
For similar reasons, I would also disagree with Prof. Bergers interpretation of Cardinal Ratzingers writings, which, it seems to me, are not so much pre-eschatological as conflicted and in process. Prof. Bergers and my different readings of Cardinal Ratzinger arise, I suspect, from an insiders vs. an outsiders engagement with the subtleties and idiosyncrasies of Catholic, perhaps especially Vatican, theological speech, which, again, are not the focus of this panel. However, I agree with him that a linking of conversion with dialogue does exist in the hearts of some Catholics (typically ones who have not done much dialoguing) and so the issue has not been rendered altogether obsolete by the developments underscored by Dr. Korn.
Eight Questions Generated by the Conversation
Prof. Berger noted that Rabbi Soloveitchiks larger argument is that the personal experience of faith cannot even be communicated. What can be communicated is intellectual apprehension of faith. The problem is that such communication is pitifully inadequate. [ ] Thus, as much as theological propositions can be conveyed, as much as even religious emotions can be partially expressed, that which ultimately commits a person to God or a faith community to its particular relationship with God remains essentially private, leaving not only a lonely man of faith but a lonely people of faitha nation that dwells alone. Since Rabbi Soloveitchik believed that untrammeled interfaith dialogue presumes to enter into that [private] realm, he declares it out of bounds. This last sentence relates to Rabbi Korns comment that Jews should exercise care and explicitly agree on the preconditions and protocols of [theological] dialogue before beginning the precarious journey.
These insightful comments raise a number of questions for me.
What is
untrammeled interfaith dialogue and how would trammeled
interfaith dialogue be defined? What are the preconditions and
protocols?
Cannot
distinct religious communities discuss their ineffable experiences of the
Holy One?
While it is surely true that ones innermost selfhood and its relationship to God cannot be communicated to another, it seems to me equally certain that the reality of anothers relationship to God can be divined. Perhaps this reality could be articulated by the word holiness. Even though I would not imagine that I could ever enter into the personal Jewish experience of faith, I think I can identify holiness when I experience it in Jewish people or in the Jewish tradition. Nor does this perception automatically lead me to desire to absorb or appropriate the holiness of the Jewish other. Krister Stendahls evocative phrase holy envy comes to mind. I discern holiness, for example, when I glimpse the profundity of rabbinic debate on this or that subject. I also realize that this manifestation of the divine presence is not mine. It belongs to Jews. So the question is: Is not profoundly spiritual dialogue possible about one anothers experiences of the Holy One within ones own tradition, and even in the others, and even recognizing the fact that there is a limit to what can be conceptualized, let alone articulated, in human speech?
Let me elaborate on this
unsettling question from within my Catholic context. If Christians can encounter
the holy in the rabbinic tradition, even while not entering wholly into the
worldview of that tradition, then dont we Christians have unavoidably to
conclude that in Israels perpetual covenant God is continuously revealing
Godself to the Jewish community in ways that are distinct from our own
experiences of God through Christ? When such revelations-in-relationship
lead to different or even conflicting verbalizations with my own traditions
articulations, must I automatically conclude that the rabbis got it wrong?
Or is it more true to my own tradition to hold instead that the greatness of God
would be lessened if God could be apprehended in only one way? Can we be content
to trust the Holy One to resolve perceived paradoxes eschatologically? I
note in passing that this line of thinking is especially difficult for
Christians in regard to Islam.
I believe that some such understanding of revelation is pertinent to Prof. Berger's comment (to paraphrase), " that classical Christian theology is not considered 'strange worship' for Christians, but it is for Jews." While the complex issue of avodah zerah is, for different reasons, perilous for both Jews and Christians to consider, perhaps the unprecedented, even blessed, present moment in our communities' long histories opens up prospects for mutual insight that have never before been possible.
Prof. Berger suggested that the essentially private personal commitment to God of the lonely man of faith is analogous to a lonely people of faith whose communal commitment to God is also private and so ultimately ineffable. However, if individual incommunicability can be sufficiently overcome so as to permit communities of shared faith discourse, then analogously why wouldnt it be possible for two distinct faith communities, especially if they are historically and/or theologically related, to sufficiently overcome their particular communal experiences to permit some sort of intelligible discourse? Indeed, if my last sentence was in any way comprehensible to anyone else, I think I have proven my point!
The absence of halakhic rhetoric [ in
Confrontation] is a deliberate effort to avoid introducing the question of
the theological status of Christianity, which from existing halakhic
perspective is certainly not one of absolute equality with Judaism. The Rav
actually opposed precisely the dialogue Dr. Korn advocates on the grounds that
such dialogue exists only when one forms community (and a collective
identity), and community, as Dr. Korn correctly notes, presumes
absolute equality, and requiring all parties to make that presumption
amounts to trading theological favors and at the least constrains our evolving
understanding of our own traditions.
But to return to my role of raising questions:
Obviously,
absolute equality cannot mean abandoning defining truth claims for the sake of
interreligious conversation. But is that the only way to define equality in this
context? Could not the equality required for interreligious dialogue include the
equality of all human beings as made in Gods image? The equality that stems
from freedom of religion? The equality that springs from the realization that
the Holy One cannot be fully compassed by human beings? The equality that
prevails when all parties have set aside the objective of trying to
convert the other?
Rabbi
Soloveitchik was concerned about the preparation of those Orthodox Jews who
might speak officially to Christians. If so, this is a concern for
Christians, too. Neither community has much prior experience or precedent of
mutually enriching interreligious dialogue to draw upon.
I am wondering if a fear of a loss of identity, a fear that Christians and Jews both experience when they substantively encounter one another, functions uniquely for Jews and Christians (as opposed to, say, Christians and Hindus, Jews and Buddhists, or even Jews and Muslims who also have a shared history) precisely because we have been interacting for so long and have at least partially defined ourselves with one eye on each other. So the question --
I think the virtually unanimous
experience of dialogists that their understanding and appreciation of their own
tradition has deepened because of dialogue demonstrates this point. However,
such Jews and Christians will also be changed
by the encounter to the extent that any stereotypes or distortions of the other
were at work in their own self-understanding. The boundaries will have shifted,
and this shift will be upsetting to some co-religionists on both sides (again,
to the degree that their own self-understanding is shaped by misconceptions of
the other).
Finally, I have to wonder if in the twenty-first century we
really have any choice, despite our appropriate hesitations and concerns. We are
horribly aware that our world is afflicted by conflicts in which religious
traditions are employed to foster hatred and violence.
Stereotyping and caricature prevail among too many religious people,
including here in the
Afterword
To Rabbi Klapper:
Rabbi Klapper has reasonably stated, "I am less confident in the comprehensiveness and especially permanence of [Catholic] repentance than Dr. Korn. What one pope has done, another can put asunder ... My strong sense is that an America-centric perspective dramatically overestimates the extent to which the new church theology about Jews has penetrated the actual church, both hierarchy and laity."
While, given our shared history, it is reasonable for Jews to wonder about the permanence of recent reforms in Catholic teaching, to say "what one pope has done, another can put asunder" is an overstatement. Nostra Aetate is instructive here. Unlike most other Catholic ecclesiastical documents, Nostra Aetate did not cite previous councils or the writings of the popes. Its authors had to go all the way back to the Apostle Paul in their search for positive theological affirmations about Judaism and the Jewish people. This in itself shows the extent and longevity of the "teaching of contempt."
Since Nostra Aetate's promulgation in 1965, however, there is now an extensive body of authoritative ecclesiastical documentation that reinforces such foundational points as the rejection of supersessionism and the of the deicide charge. In addition, first-time historic events of great theological signficance have occurred, including the papal prayer at the Western Wall. Future popes and bishops will have reckon with these precedents, which in the Catholic tradition are not easily circumvented.
On the other hand, Rabbi Klapper is surely right to ponder how far newer theological insights have penetrated the Catholic community at large. As one might expect of an effort to recraft long-standing core ideas, the evidence is mixed. It leads me to suggest that Catholic and other Christian efforts at teshuvah would be enhanced by meaningful dialogue with Orthodox Jewish friends.
To Rabbis Klapper and Berger:
Both Aryeh Klapper and David Berger expressed the concern of Rabbi Soloveitchik that, as Rabbi Klapper put it, theological interreligious dialogue would cause participants to "build community [that] will create shared experience, in other words shared identity, with no lines to preserve individuality." I am afraid I don't see that this follows at all, though I admit that a member of a religious majority may here have very different impressions from members of a religious minority.
(A) My experience of dialogue suggests that far from some sort of syncretistic identity, a concern for the distinctiveness of the other's identity emerges. It is not a "shared identity" that develops, it is a shared respect for each other's characteristic perspectives that deepens.
(B) Social psychology informs us that personal identities are formed in relationship to others who are both similar and different from us. Post-first century Judaism and Christianity have not developed in isolation from each other, or from other traditions, but rather in interaction, positive and negative, with them. To some extent, we already have a "shared identity," or perhaps better, a "reciprocal identity," because of our shared history and theological rootedness in biblical Israel. I do agree that the conscious maintenance of religious boundaries is necessary, however, those boundaries may be different from those that were demanded when our communities were hostile to one another.
(C) Rabbi Jonathan Sacks is quoted as saying, "rather than engaging in dialogue, let us become friends." To me, friendships will be pretty superficial (and hence ephemeral) unless the friends converse with some degree of intimacy. Since it is our distinctive faith experiences that define both Jews and Christians, it would seem that discussion about our respective faith experiences would be required for Jews qua Jews and Christians qua Christians truly to be friends and not simply good neighbors. Having said all this, though, I want to repeat my agreement with Rabbi Klapper's sentiment that there is a need for "lines to preserve individuality." This leads to the following remark.
To Rabbis Berger and Korn:
I would like to repeat a question I posed on the day of our conference. Both Eugene Korn and David Berger used such terms as "untrammeled," "undefined," "preconditions and protocols," "dialogue that knows its place" to discuss setting some sorts of limits or qualifications for theological interreligious dialogue. Rabbi Korn mentions possible prerequisites such as agreeing upon the equality of rights and dignity, the forswearance of conversion, and the attempt at strengthening of spiritual commitments. Alternatively, dialogue could be limited according to topic or methodology; I suspect the latter would be more fruitful. However one approaches things, it seems to me that one major question that must next be considered is how the limits of theological dialogue between Catholics and Jews might be defined.