The occasion for this Press Release is the story reported here that the Bishops of England and Wales are to petition the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei for a change to the Good Friday Prayer for the Conversion of the Jews used in the Extraordinary Form.
FIUV Press Release: on the Good Friday ‘Prayer for
the Jews’
The
Prayer for the Jews used in the Extraordinary Form Good Friday Liturgy
continues to be a source of comment and misunderstanding, and the FIUV wishes
to respond as follows.
Statement
by the President of the FIUV, Felipe Alanís Suárez:
It
was to avoid misunderstandings of the Prayer for the Jews that Pope Benedict
XVI composed the 2008 version of the prayer, which is clearly based on what is
essential to Christianity: the acceptance of Christ as the saviour of the whole
world, and the desire that all persons be saved. Jews are mentioned because of
their special role in the history of salvation, and the special concern we must
have for our ‘elder brothers’ (as Pope St John Paul II called them). The prayer
looks forward to the incorporation of the Jewish people, of which Our Lord
Jesus Christ and His first disciples were all members, in the salvation won for
the human race by Christ on the Cross, a reconciliation which, as St Paul
teaches, will be fulfilled only towards the end of history.
The FIUV is convinced that any
possible continuing misunderstanding regarding the Good Friday Prayer for the
Jews can be resolved in the context of the Magisterium of the Church, without veiling
the treasures of our Faith.
We, as faithful attached to the
Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, acknowledge that to ask of our Lord for the
grace of sharing with all our brothers the joy of salvation in Jesus Christ, is
an act of humility and selfless love, and a spiritual work of mercy.
The
FIUV entirely rejects all hatred and hostility towards the Jewish people, and
all forms of unjust discrimination.
Further
observations:
1. Although the Novus Ordo Good Friday Prayer
for the Jews does not explicitly refer to Jews acknowledging Christ as Saviour,
other prayers in the revised liturgy do so. The Novus Ordo
Vespers of Easter Sunday includes the prayer ‘Let Israel recognize in you the
Messiah it has longed for’; the Morning Office of 31st December
includes the prayer ‘Christ, Son of David, fulfilment of the prophecies, may the Jewish people accept you as their
awaited Deliverer [Latin: Messiah].’
2. In their daily prayers, Jews pray for
the conversion of ‘all of the impious of the earth’.
Rabbi Jacob Neusner, responding to criticisms of the 2008 Prayer for the Jews,
pointed out the parallel with the Prayer for the Jews and remarked ‘The
Catholic prayer manifests the same altruistic spirit that characterizes the
faith of Judaism.’ (Die Tagespost,23
Feb 2008)[1]
3. Walter, Cardinal Kasper, defended the
2008 prayer, explaining that a hope that Jews accept
Christ, which may be fulfilled only by God, rather than by targeted proselytism,
and eschatologically (at the end of history), is nothing more than a necessary
consequence of the Christian faith:
A
sincere dialogue between Jews and Christians, …is possible only, on the one
hand, on the basis of a shared faith in one God, creator of heaven and earth,
and in the promises made to Abraham and to the Fathers; and on the other, in
the awareness and respect of the fundamental difference that consists in faith
in Jesus as Christ and Redeemer of all men. (L'Osservatore Romano 10th April 2008)[2]
Background:
1. The prayer used today in the
Extraordinary Form was composed by Pope Benedict XVI in 2008,
in response to concerns about the wording of the previously used prayer, and
runs as follows:
Let
us also pray for the Jews: that our God and Lord may illuminate their hearts,
that they acknowledge Jesus Christ is the Saviour of all men.
2. It is recited, in Latin, once a year,
in the small number of churches worldwide where the Good Friday Liturgy is
celebrated in the Extraordinary Form. It forms part of a
series of prayers for different categories of persons, both within and without
the Church, the latter including heretics and pagans. In each case the
celebrant prays for God’s graces for them. This pattern is followed in the
reformed, 1970 (‘Novus Ordo’) Missal, although the wording of the prayers is
different.[3]
3. The prayer is based on Scripture,
notably St Paul. The image of ‘light’ penetrating the
hearts of the Jews is drawn from 2 Cor 4:3-6; St Paul speaks of the eventual
conversion of the Jews in Romans 11:25-26. Romans 11:29 says of the Jewish
Covenant that God ‘never revokes His promises’, which is quoted by Vatican II’s
Nostra aetate, and by Pope St John
Paul II, as the basis for a special affection and respect which Christians owe
the Jewish people.[4]
[1] The full text of the article can
be seen in English here:
[2] The full text can be found in
English here:
[3] The different versions of the Good
Friday Prayer for the Jews can be found on Wikipedia:
[4] Romans 11:29: ‘For the gifts and
the calling of God are without repentance.’ Quoted by Nostra aetate 4, and Pope St John Paul II in his Address to the
Jewish Community of Berlin on 17th November 1980.