12 Nov, 2009

All Creatures of Our God and King

Who is a Jew? And who gets to decide?

LONDON — The questions before the judges in Courtroom No. 1 of Britain’s Supreme Court were as ancient and as complex as Judaism itself. On the surface, the court was considering a straight forward challenge to the admissions policy of a Jewish high school in London. But the case, in which arguments concluded Oct. 30, has potential repercussions for thousands of other parochial schools across Britain. And in addressing issues at the heart of Jewish identity, it has exposed bitter divisions in Britain’s community of 300,000 or so Jews, pitting members of various Jewish denominations against one another.

“This is potentially the biggest case in the British Jewish community’s modern history,” said Stephen Pollard, editor of the Jewish Chronicle newspaper here. “It speaks directly to the right of the state to intervene in how a religion operates.”

The case began when a 12-year-old boy, an observant Jew whose father is Jewish and whose mother is a Jewish convert, applied to the school, JFS. Founded in 1732 as the Jews’ Free School,has around 1,900 students, but it gets far more applicants than it accepts.

By many standards, the JFS applicant, identified in court papers as “M,” is Jewish. But not in the eyes of the school, which defines Judaism under the Orthodox definition set out by Jonathan Sacks, chief rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth. Because M’s mother converted in a progressive, not an Orthodox, synagogue, the school said, she was not a Jew — nor was her son. It turned down his application.

That would have been the end of it. But M’s family sued, saying that the school had discriminated against him. They lost, but the ruling was overturned by the Court of Appeal this summer.

In an explosive decision, the court concluded that basing school admissions on a classic test of Judaism — whether one’s mother is Jewish— was by definition discriminatory. Whether the rationale was “benign or malignant, theological or supremacist,” the court wrote, “makes it no less and no more unlawful.”

The case rested on whether the school’s test of Jewishness was based on religion, which would be legal, or on race or ethnicity, which would not. The court ruled that it was an ethnic test because it concerned the status of M’s mother rather than whether M considered himself Jewish and practiced Judaism.

Story courtesy of The New York Times.
Photo courtesy of Google Images.

Galatians 3:28 (NIV)

There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.

When we belong to God's family we have a brand new identity. No longer are we defined simply by our gender, our ethnicity, or our status in society, we are defined by our allegiance to the Kingdom of God, our membership in a colony of heaven here on earth.

The question currently being debated in Britain is an important one, what defines us, how do we create the boundaries that form our religious and cultural identities? The ancient hymn by St. Francis of Assisi, responds to questions like these by painting a radical picture of the family of God.

Thou rushing wind that art so strong
Ye clouds that sail in Heaven along,
O praise Him! Alleluia!
Thou rising moon, in praise rejoice,
Ye lights of evening, find a voice!
O praise Him! Alleluia!

St. Francis sings to the wind and the clouds, the moon and the stars, encouraging the whole created order to sing praises to the creator. As one part of that created order, the whole human race is simply one big family, all children of God, all creatures of our God and King. Often what divides us, the boundries that seperate us, the human institutions that "define" us, conflict with God's desire for us to see ourselves as nothing more than his children. Paul reminds us that when Our Story connects with God's Story even the boundries of gender no longer have their foundational meaning, only our connection to Jesus does.

In other words, no state, no religious hierarchy, no school, no human institution can truly define us and never should they divide us. We are all creatures of our God and king. And our task as Christians is to live in the reality that while earthly allegiances such as nationality, ethinicity, and class may give meaning, direction, and an identity to some, ours is found in Christ alone.

  • What defines your identity? Make a list of five things that really shape who you are.
  • Think about how you balance your citizenship between the nations of this world and the Kingdom of God. Are they always compatible or does one hold priority over the other?
  • Ask a friend what they think about today's story. Ask them how they define who's a Jew, Christian, Hindu, etc.
  • Find out what defines the identity of one of your friends, then engage them in an activity that nurtures them in that way — for example, if their identity is "basketball player" then go shoot hoops with them, if their identity is "nature lover" then invite them on a hike.
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