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A Confessional Lutheran Pastor's musings as a "stranger and pilgrim" in (but not "of") this world. I am a British (and European Union) citizen, an American citizen, but - above all - a citizen of Heaven and subject of the King of Kings and Lord of Lords - Jesus Christ the Son of the Living God and the Saviour of the world.

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Name: Pr. Jonathan Naumann, Ph.D.
Location: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

By the time I received a divine Call to serve a congregation in the Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod, I had spent nearly half my life in Britain as a missionary and pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of England. So - like my Honda INSIGHT - I am a bit of a hybrid. And I love my life, my wife, my six children and my three grand-children!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Christ and the Holocaust

As another round of debates involving Christians and the holocaust takes place, there is something that people need to get right about Christ and the Holocaust: Christ was not the cause of the Holocaust. He was Himself a Jewish victim of antisemitism and His death was a holocaust.

The word “holocaust” is a sacrificial term. In places such as Genesis 22, the Greek translation of the Hebrew word “olah”, meaning “burnt offering” uses the word “holokauston” from which we get the word “holocaust”. And, although His sacrifice did not include being burnt, Jesus was nevertheless dying as a sacrifice and there was more than a little “anti-semitism” in the torment this particular Jew endured. Those Gentile soldiers relished the idea of taking their frustration out on all Jews by abusing one Jewish prisoner, calling Him the “King of the Jews.”

And where was God as all this was happening? That is the haunting question people ask regarding the 20th century “Shoah”. The answer in this case is that God was not indifferent as Jesus own personal “holocaust” went on. God was in Christ, the Messiah, reconciling the world to Himself, through the sacrifice His Jewish Son was making:

“...in Christ God was reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and entrusting to us the message of reconciliation. ...For our sake He made Him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in Him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5.19-21).

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2 Comments:

Blogger Pr. Jonathan Naumann, Ph.D. said...

His Roman tormenters abused Jerusalem Jews vicariously by torturing Jesus as "King of the Jews". At the same time humanity was punished vicariously through the execution of Jesus in our place as the supreme sacrifice of atonement. Wow - what a strange parallel!

8:59 PM  
Blogger Connor said...

Hi Pastor,
I was wondering if you could explain what the word “Shoah” means. You referenced it in your latest post as us, in the 21st century, being in a “Shoah”.

7:31 AM  

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