Thursday, March 7, 2013

No "Christian Seders," Please!

What follows is an argument from Dr. Mary Luti, visiting professor and director of Wilson Chapel at Andover Newton Theological School. I thought Dr. Luti had written so lucidly on this important issue that I asked if I could post here, and she generously agreed. Even if you don't agree with everything she has written, this ought to serve to spark conversation among Christians.

Holding a "Christian seder" is a widespread (and growing?) practice, but I agree with Dr. Luti that it is not a helpful one. As always, interested to hear your thoughts...


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With Holy Week on the horizon,  many Christian congregations have started announcing Seder dinners to observe Maundy Thursday. People of good will recognize this as a devout and well-intentioned attempt to honor the Jewishness of Jesus, and the Jewish roots of the Christian communion meal which was, Christians say, “instituted” by Jesus on the night he was handed over--a night that fell, according to the gospel accounts, during the annual Passover observance. It is understandable, therefore, that Christians would desire to commemorate this institution with a nod to its original context.

There are many difficulties with the practice of a Seder meal by Christians, however (the biggest being that a Seder is simply not for Christians, but we’ll get to that later). The other biggie is that we really do not know for sure what the “original context” of Jesus’ ‘last supper’ was.  We think we do: since Sunday School we’ve been taught it was a Passover meal, or Seder; but scholars continue to debate the precise character of the meal Jesus shared with his disciples that night. One thing we know for sure, however, is that, although it may have been a Passover meal of some sort, it was not a Seder. We know this because the introduction of the Seder into Jewish ritual life came after the time of Jesus.

Modern day Jewish celebrations of the Passover are a melding of traditions that arose shortly after the destruction of the Temple (70 CE), through Late Antiquity and into Middle Ages. It is a developing tradition, too, with additions being made to the Haggadah even to this day. Ironically, some scholars believe that the Seder developed in part at least as a reaction and resistance to the growing influence of the Christian church and its sacred meal. If that is true, Christians celebrating a Seder are celebrating, at least in part, a meal that was meant to criticize them and establish the distinctiveness of Jewish rites over against Christian ones. This anti-Christian critique is no longer prominent in contemporary Seders, but this curious history of the Seder still makes for a polemical mish-mash that, if known by the organizers of "Christian Seders," might take away some of the romance of the night!

So… to hold a Seder as a way to commemorate the “background” meal Jesus shared with his disciples and which he “turned into” a Communion meal (as I have heard some Christians say) is anachronistic—it is a tradition Jesus did not know. More precisely and significantly, however (as I said above), it is a tradition that developed into its present forms after Jews and Christians had taken separate religious paths—a tradition, therefore, that Jews and those who became Christian never shared in the first place. It belongs to Jews only and distinguishes them as Jews in ways that make any Christian usage of it seem presumptuous, especially given the fraught and violent history of Christian usurpation and replacement of all things Jewish that we call “supersessionism.”  Given this history and this ongoing supplanting of the Jewish covenant, I wonder if we would do better to spend our time reflecting on what often befell Jews in Holy Week in many places in medieval Western and Eastern Europe—the pogrom—than to spend time appropriating one of their characteristic rituals and making it our own.

Holding a Seder in a Christian church as a Christian event during Christian Holy Week is dicey, then. Dicier still is celebrating a Eucharist in the course of the Seder or finishing the Seder with Communion. This sends an unintentional but real message that the important thing about this Seder is what (we suppose erroneously) Jesus did to transform it and make it into something else. In other words, what we imply is that the Seder's real value is to point towards or usher in communion-- that communion is really what it’s all about, when all else is said and done. This is to write Jews out of their own story. We have already succeeded in writing them out by the way we often use Old Testament texts in preaching and teaching—let’s not turn their meal into our meal for our devotional agendas, just because it feels more authentic or rootsy for us to do so.

Ritual is, after all, lodged in/ arises from a community’s corporate experience; and in this case, it is the experience of suffering and liberation, slavery and salvation that Christian share with Jews in a kind of mythical and mystical sense, but not in fact: we are not Jews (the vast majority of us, anyway) and we cannot and do not celebrate a Seder out of anything remotely resembling the lived experience of Jews, or with the theological and spiritual worldview such experience generates. We can appreciate it, revere it, admire it, learn about it, even participate in it (for example, when invited into a Jewish home during Passover), but it is and never will be ours, and we ought not treat it as if it were. Just because we are a "successor tradition" doesn’t mean that everything that "they” have is or should also be ours.

There is a danger that in a well-intentioned attempt to honor the church’s Jewish origins, and (we think) do what Jesus did that night, we may end up caricaturing the Jewish ritual we claim to honor. It can be a kind of pious play-acting that is a very far cry from the profound communal anamnesis that is proper to “this night unlike any other night.” Only Jews can experience Passover in such a way that those who ate in haste and fled the Egyptians through the Sea have no spiritual advantage over those who sit at the Seder table today.

Beyond all this is the basic question of why some of us feel we need to hold a Seder in Holy Week in our Christian congregations in the first place. The treasure chest of Christian liturgical ritual that pertains to the Paschal season is so enormously rich that one wonders why we would turn to someone else’s. Perhaps it is because so few of our churches celebrate this range and depth of options that we cast around looking for something meaningful and rich like we imagine a Seder to be.

What could Christian do instead during Holy Week if we take seriously the objection that a “Christian Seder” is anachronistic, a contradiction in terms, and a potential offense to Jews today for whom the Passover rituals are a living tradition, and not a sort of curious antiquarianism?

If we really want to understand the mysteries of Jesus' last days, we might consider participating in the classic liturgies of the Great Three Days of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday, and the Easter Vigil. It is there, in the experience of the powerful liturgical traditions of those three days, that we encounter the meaning, depth, and power of our salvation. In the ritual of the Passover, the Jewish people recount their story of redemption. In the liturgies of the Great Three Days - and especially the Easter Vigil - the Christian community recounts and relives our story of redemption.

In the end, congregations that hold “Christian Seders” may simply desire to learn about Judaism, better understand their Jewish neighbors, and grapple with the Jewish roots of Christianity—all of which is commendable, even urgent. They should go ahead and do so, not with a Christian Seder, but with a visit to their local synagogue for a talk with the Rabbi about how they can facilitate that understanding with respect. Perhaps the Rabbi would come and talk to a group in that congregation about what a Seder entails and what it means to Jews. Or perhaps a Jewish friend might have an extra place at their Seder table for some folks from the Christian congregation this year.

And if Maundy Thursday still cries out for a meal, hold a potluck, an agape meal, a love feast, an elaborated communion service—choose from the Christian repertoire of feasts to celebrate with— but let the Jews have their feast. No Christian Seders, please!


Dr. Luti adds this P.S.:


At the risk of overdoing it (I am not in fact persuaded that we can ever overdo this), I want to add to my previous Note about "Christian Seders" the following precision:

On Maundy Thursday, many “mainline” Protestant congregations hold “Christian Seders” in conjunction with Tenebrae, Holy Communion, and other liturgical commemorations of the night Jesus was handed over.  They give various reasons for doing so, but in general they use the Seder as a way to recall and explore the Jewish roots of our faith, to honor the Jewishness of Jesus, to lend historical context to the institution of the Christian Eucharist, and to learn about Jewish ritual practices (i. e.., “teaching Seders”) in an open, interfaith spirit.

In some cases, these Seders are led by Jews—a local rabbi, or Jewish friends of the congregation—but the majority are not. They are a wholly “in-house” affair, for Christians by Christians. My objections are directed primarily at these in-house kinds of  “Christian Seder” celebrations.

Congregations that borrow or adapt the Jewish Seder for their own devotional purposes on Maundy Thursday during Holy Week need to understand that what they are doing is not a neutral act. Apart from other significant theological and historical objections that should be made to a “Christian Seder,”  [see my previous "Note”] the long, violent and painful story of Christian appropriation of Judaism itself—replacement theology or ‘supersessionism’—should be enough to make us think twice about doing it.

It is no accident that many a medieval pogrom erupted during Holy Week. It was a time rife with anti-Jewish preaching that placed the blame for Jesus’ death on Jews—not just on the ancient Jews, but on all Jews— and, in some cases, directly called for unsparing violence against them. Whenever Christians celebrate a “Christian Seder” that includes or culminates in Holy Communion, it is also chillingly instructive to recall that one of the great medieval slanders against the Jews is that they routinely committed sacrilege against the communion wafer in all kinds of horrific and bloodthirsty ways. This is the history we ineluctably carry with us whenever we do something like celebrate a “Christian Seder.”

My objection to the “Christian Seder” is not about the potential it has for offending Jews. It has that potential, and it does offend many Jews, and avoiding this offense is a good thing to want to do, and  I do want us to avoid giving it! But the bigger issue for me is the insidious impact it can have on us Christians.

Let’s face it, despite years of interfaith  efforts, many Christians continue to assume reflexively that Christianity has supplanted Judaism in God’s plan and affections. We might not say it that way, but it shows in the way we use certain biblical texts, talk about a God of Love (Christian) and a God of Wrath (the “Old Testament God”), and juxtapose Law and Grace—in these cases and others, the clear implication is that Christianity has not only succeeded Judaism, it has superseded it. 

In their everyday dealings with Jews (if they have such connections), most mainline Christians probably don’t regard the religion of their neighbors, friends and coworkers as inferior to their own; but in church, in the course of hearing scripture and sermons on scripture, during certain liturgical seasons, and in devotional conversations, an old reflex asserts itself. Our inner Marcionite emerges, and as long as no one corrects us, we continue to operate in the universe of stereotype and slander that for centuries made it possible for Christians to see it as a religious duty to defame and slaughter Jews. And the fact that we do so often unwitting makes it all the worse.

This is my point: not only because we have a long history of appropriating Judaism for Christian  ends, making of it a mere preparation for the true faith and regarding its characteristic practices as mere foreshadowings and symbols of the real things, we are still doing it today. The practice of a “Christian Seder” is a prime example of just how unexamined this fraught relationship remains, and thus how easily its consequences could be visited on our neighbors again, even in our enlightened, interfaith, tolerant and inclusive age.

That it could never happen here, that it could never happen again, that we would never do that—these are the lazy assumptions that allow us to meander through Holy Week up to our necks in the dangerous waters of supersessionism, plating out again and again the old patterns of reflex disdain.

Contempt takes many forms: I think the celebration of a Seder meal by Christians and for Christians is one of them. It may seem devout and altogether benign, even constructive, on the surface; but it is just one more in a long sad line of things we have tried to steal from Jesus’ people in his name, as we have systematically written Jews out of their own story because, we say (not without truth), it is also in a deep sense our story too. And if it is also our story (and here we go wrong)we can do with it whatever we please.

Although holding a Seder (for Christians by Christians) may seem like a devout and constructive thing to do, and no doubt for many Christians it lends meaning to the Holy Week journey, it is an unavoidably fraught activity. Our anti-Jewish history has “earned” us a particular responsibility to make sure that our embrace of the Jewish heritage is serious, respectful, self-conscious and well-considered. We may not borrow, play-act, adapt, or otherwise appropriate anything Jewish like a Seder without carrying with us into that activity this whole history.

Remembering and telling the Jewish story is one of the Seder’s most characteristic features. Maybe instead of holding a Seder we should make time in Holy Week remembering and telling our own story, lamenting and repenting the sad history that haunts us still, and looking to Christ for the grace to change it, once and for all.  



7 comments:

  1. I disagree with your premise. The anti-Jewish actions of "Roman Catholic" church in antiquity should not define how followers of Jesus treat the Passover today. While today's Passover Seder may not be exactly how it was celebrated during the time Jesus walked the Earth, the Feasts WERE celebrated as commanded by God and should be celebrated for those who consider themselves part of God's family. To separate Jew from Gentile is in opposition to what the bible teaches about how God views His children.

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    Replies
    1. Well stated in such few words! I agree completely!

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  2. I completely agree with Lisa. This article comes off as Anti-Semitic. 1 Corinthians 11:26 " For whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes." It doesn't matter if we are doing it exactly as Christ did, "For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit," Romans 14:17

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  3. I fully agree with Lisa and Prairie Todd. God commanded us to celebrate HIS festivals. They are not strictly Jewish festivals. Also, your suggestion that we celebrate a pagan festival such as easter, initiated by a pagan god Constantine is in gross error. Constantine strove to separate we Christians from our Hebrewic roots.

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  4. the word Easter may be pagan, but the Resurrection is not a pagan festival.

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  5. This article raises many issues about Christian use of Jewish ritual, especially the Passover Seder; the author also questions the motives of those Christians who celebrate Passover. There are other liturgical concerns expressed as well for Christians who do celebrate certain liturgical customs associated with Holy Week and Easter. For those of us Christians who celebrate some form of Passover Seder--whether "traditional" or "non-traditional"--the celebration of both the Exodus event and the Last Supper is a powerful way
    to re-enact and portray God's mighty acts of redemption not only for the ancient Hebrew nation, but also for all nations. For Christians, re-enacting the Exodus event and the Holy Week/Easter events not only serve to educate us about God's actions in human history but also reinforce the constant biblical command to "remember." Passover celebrations connect believers to biblical stories that are central to our beliefs, including the Pauline statement that "Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us, therefore, let us keep the festival..." There are many valid reasons for Christians to celebrate the biblical festivals, and both Jews and Christians have freely expanded and adapted biblical holidays throughout their respective histories, including "appropriating" customs, worship traditions, patterns of celebration and ideas from
    other cultures and each other's traditions. There has always
    been religious syncretism any time and any where humans
    congregate to celebrate their beliefs. Holiday celebrations have always been subject to change and adaptation throughout
    history, and that includes the myriads of liturgical forms
    that synagogues and churches evolved wherever their faith communities formed. There is no reason for Christians to "disconnect" themselves from the very Hebrew scriptures that form the first division of their Bibles, especially since many of these same scriptures--such as the Exodus narratives--are
    publicly read as part of the Holy Week celebration cycle. If we can read and publicly proclaim the Exodus event, we can most certainly "act it out", just as we "act out" the Passion narratives during Holy Week and "act out" the Resurrection
    story throughout the Easter season. In fact, we Christians
    "act out" the Psalms whenever we worship with congregational and choral singing, musical instruments, banners, processionals and dance; and whenever we publicly read scripture, pray or preach the Word of God. We "act out" biblical events whenever we portray biblical stories not only in intergenerational plays and pageants, but whenever we gather to worship, whether during the Sabbath--for those believers who keep the biblical Sabbath--or for those of us who celebrate the Lord's Day,which is a weekly commemoration of the resurrection of Yeshua our Redeemer. Passover Seders in Christian contexts provide concrete, visual and sensory experiences that enable the participants not only to learn about the Exodus events and the Passion events, but to literally "step into" the biblical stories and personally "see" how Yahweh splits the Red Sea and raises His Anointed One from the dead. Our response to any Passover Seder in a
    Christian context should be gratitude to the God Who not only delivered the ancient Hebrews from oppression, but Who also delivered us--at great cost--from sin, the grave and eternal
    destruction!

    ReplyDelete
  6. This article raises many issues about Christian use of Jewish ritual, especially the Passover Seder; the author also questions the motives of those Christians who celebrate Passover. There are other liturgical concerns expressed as well for Christians who do celebrate certain liturgical customs associated with Holy Week and Easter. For those of us Christians who celebrate some form of Passover Seder--whether "traditional" or "non-traditional"--the celebration of both the Exodus event and the Last Supper is a powerful way
    to re-enact and portray God's mighty acts of redemption not only for the ancient Hebrew nation, but also for all nations. For Christians, re-enacting the Exodus event and the Holy Week/Easter events not only serve to educate us about God's actions in human history but also reinforce the constant biblical command to "remember." Passover celebrations connect believers to biblical stories that are central to our beliefs, including the Pauline statement that "Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us, therefore, let us keep the festival..." There are many valid reasons for Christians to celebrate the biblical festivals, and both Jews and Christians have freely expanded and adapted biblical holidays throughout their respective histories, including "appropriating" customs, worship traditions, patterns of celebration and ideas from
    other cultures and each other's traditions. There has always
    been religious syncretism any time and any where humans
    congregate to celebrate their beliefs. Holiday celebrations have always been subject to change and adaptation throughout
    history, and that includes the myriads of liturgical forms
    that synagogues and churches evolved wherever their faith communities formed. There is no reason for Christians to "disconnect" themselves from the very Hebrew scriptures that form the first division of their Bibles, especially since many of these same scriptures--such as the Exodus narratives--are
    publicly read as part of the Holy Week celebration cycle. If we can read and publicly proclaim the Exodus event, we can most certainly "act it out", just as we "act out" the Passion narratives during Holy Week and "act out" the Resurrection
    story throughout the Easter season. In fact, we Christians
    "act out" the Psalms whenever we worship with congregational and choral singing, musical instruments, banners, processionals and dance; and whenever we publicly read scripture, pray or preach the Word of God. We "act out" biblical events whenever we portray biblical stories not only in intergenerational plays and pageants, but whenever we gather to worship, whether during the Sabbath--for those believers who keep the biblical Sabbath--or for those of us who celebrate the Lord's Day,which is a weekly commemoration of the resurrection of Yeshua our Redeemer. Passover Seders in Christian contexts provide concrete, visual and sensory experiences that enable the participants not only to learn about the Exodus events and the Passion events, but to literally "step into" the biblical stories and personally "see" how Yahweh splits the Red Sea and raises His Anointed One from the dead. Our response to any Passover Seder in a
    Christian context should be gratitude to the God Who not only delivered the ancient Hebrews from oppression, but Who also delivered us--at great cost--from sin, the grave and eternal
    destruction!

    ReplyDelete