Reconsidering otherness in the shadow of the Holocaust: some proposals for post-Holocaust ecclesiology
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Date
27/06/2015Author
Leggett, Katie Rebecca
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Abstract
This dissertation combines a sustained reflection on the European and North
American Post-Holocaust theological landscape with the themes of otherness,
exclusion, and identity. The study aims to offer a constructive contribution toward
ecclesiology in a post-Holocaust world riven with a rejection of otherness. The
consensus among Holocaust scholars is that the moral failure of the churches to
engage on behalf of the vast majority of victims of the Third Reich evinces a
profound sickness at the heart of the Christian faith. Both Holocaust theologians and
ecclesial statements have made notable strides towards diagnosing and curing this
illness through proposals to radically reshape Christian theology in the shadow of
Holocaust atrocities. However, rarely have these proposals outlined revisions in the
realm of practical theology, specifically relating to ecclesiology and how the
Christian community might live as church in the post-Holocaust era. This study
conducts an interdisciplinary analysis of dominant trends within post-Holocaust
theology through the hermeneutical lens of the propensity to abandon, dominate, or
eliminate the Other. It argues that the leitmotif of post-Holocaust proposals for
revision, i.e. the refutation of antisemitism and a renewed emphasis on
Christian/Jewish solidarity, is potentially an exacerbation of the problem of otherness
rather than a corrective.
Chapter one cultivates a conceptual lens of a rejection of otherness,
highlighting its pervasiveness and its deleterious implications for Christian churches.
Chapter two surveys a wide range of post-Holocaust ecclesial statements as well as
reflections by Holocaust theologians in order to portray the churches’ own perception
of their role during the Holocaust and how they have begun to reformulate Christian
theology and practice in this light. Chapter three analyzes three dominant trends that
come to light when the post-Holocaust landscape is assessed through the lens of
otherness. Chapter four explores dynamics of Christian and ecclesial identity as a
framework for the cultivation of multi-dimensional identities which make space for
the Other. Finally, chapter five will briefly envision some ecclesial characteristics
and practices that might better equip churches with the moral resources to resist a
rejection of otherness and build an ethical responsibility for the Other into the core of
ecclesial identity