JWS ARE NOT TO BLAME FOR DEATH OF JESUS !!!!!!!
Posted: Sun Mar 06, 2011 8:58 am
Jews are not to blame for death of Jesus, says Pope in dispute over Bible passage
By Simon Caldwell
3rd March 2011
The Pope has exonerated Jewish people for the Crucifixion and death of Jesus.
In extracts released from his forthcoming book on Christ, Pope Benedict XVI has addressed one of the most controversial issues of Christianity by saying Jews bore no culpability.
He confronts the controversial text of St Matthew’s Gospel in which ‘the Jews’ demand the execution of Jesus and shout to the Roman governor Pontius Pilate: ‘Let his blood be on us and on our children.’
The passage has been described as a ‘rallying cry for anti-Semites down the centuries’.
But the Pope said when St Matthew wrote ‘the Jews’ he meant the mob in Pilate’s courtyard and not the Jewish people in general.
As such the crowd was representative of the whole of sinful humanity, he added.
It did not represent ‘a curse, but rather redemption, salvation’, the Pope said in Jesus of Nazareth – Holy Week: From Entrance into Jerusalem to the Resurrection, which will be published next week.
Roman Catholicism explicitly rejected the notion of the inherent guilt of the Jews in 1965.
Sister Margaret Shepherd, of the committee for Catholic-Jewish relations of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference, said the Pope’s book ‘offers original insights into the death of Jesus and the question of responsibility for it’.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... z1FpN9HnUd
By Simon Caldwell
3rd March 2011
The Pope has exonerated Jewish people for the Crucifixion and death of Jesus.
In extracts released from his forthcoming book on Christ, Pope Benedict XVI has addressed one of the most controversial issues of Christianity by saying Jews bore no culpability.
He confronts the controversial text of St Matthew’s Gospel in which ‘the Jews’ demand the execution of Jesus and shout to the Roman governor Pontius Pilate: ‘Let his blood be on us and on our children.’
The passage has been described as a ‘rallying cry for anti-Semites down the centuries’.
But the Pope said when St Matthew wrote ‘the Jews’ he meant the mob in Pilate’s courtyard and not the Jewish people in general.
As such the crowd was representative of the whole of sinful humanity, he added.
It did not represent ‘a curse, but rather redemption, salvation’, the Pope said in Jesus of Nazareth – Holy Week: From Entrance into Jerusalem to the Resurrection, which will be published next week.
Roman Catholicism explicitly rejected the notion of the inherent guilt of the Jews in 1965.
Sister Margaret Shepherd, of the committee for Catholic-Jewish relations of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference, said the Pope’s book ‘offers original insights into the death of Jesus and the question of responsibility for it’.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... z1FpN9HnUd