Christians in the West are just beginning to live the way Jews have had to live since Christians took over the world by making Caesar a member of the church. Put simply, we must learn from Jews how to survive in a world that is not constituted by the recognition, much less the worship of our God. In the process, Christians may not only learn from the wisdom Jews have hewn in their struggle to survive Christianity, but we may even learn that our destiny is inseparable from the destiny of the Jews. I am convinced, however, that Christians cannot learn that lesson if, in an attempt to appear tolerant, we pretend our ethics can be divorced from the conviction that God through Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection has made us nothing less than heirs of Abraham. Accordingly, I believe Jewish theological readings of Christianity must face the challenge that the existence of Christianity is not a mistake, but rather one of the ways God desires to make his covenant with Israel known to the nations.
[Stanley Hauerwas, "Christian Ethics in Jewish Terms: A Response to David Novak", cited in Peter Ochs, Another Reformation: Postliberal Christianity and the Jews (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Academic, 2011), p. 115.]
Put as starkly as I can put it: if Christian envy of the Jews is ever so effective that we are able to destroy the last Jew from the face of the earth, then God will destroy the earth. Our God is not some generalized spirit, but a fleshy God whose body is the Jews.
[Stanley Hauerwas, "Jews and the Eucharist", cited in ibid., p. 116.]
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