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The Jewish Revolutionary Spirit and its Impact on World History E. Michael Jones Fidelity Press South Bend, Indiana 2008 5 Yet what kind of men were they who set their hands to the task [of rebuilding the temple]? They were men who constantly resisted the Holy Spirit, revolutionists bent on stirring up sedition. After the destruction which occurred under Vespa sian and Titus, these Jews rebelled during the reign of Hadrian and tried to go back to the old commonwealth and way of life. What they failed to realize was that they were fighting against the decree of God, who had ordered that Jerusalem remain forever in ruins. St. John Chrysostom, Adversos Judaeos Christianity did not bring a message of social revolutiQn like that of the ill-fated Spartacus, whose struggle led to so much bloodshed. Jesus was not Spartacus, he was not engaged in a fight for political liberation like Barabbas or Bar-Kochba. Jesus, who himself died on the Cross, brought something totally different: an encounter with the Lord of all lords, an encounter with the living God and thus an encounter with a hope stronger than the sufferings of slavery, a hope which therefore transformed life and the world from within. Pope Benedict XVI, Spe Salvi 7 Contents Introduction 13 Chapter One The Synagogue of Satan 27 Chapter Two Julian the Apostate and the Doomed Temple 57 Chapter Three Rome Discovers the Talmud 93 Chapter Four False Conversion and the Inquisition 133 Chapter Five The Revolution Arrives in Europe 149 Chapter Six The Converso Problem 203 Chapter Seven Reuchlin vs. Pfefferkorn 225 Chapter Eight Thomas Muentzer and the Peasant Revolt 257 Chapter Nine The Anabaptist Rebellion 293 Chapter Ten John Dee and Magic 327 Chapter Eleven Menassah and the Apostate Messiah 409 Chapter Twelve The Rise of Freemasonry 473 9 Chapter Thirteen The Revolution of 1848 563 Chapter Fourteen Ottilie Assing and the American Civil War 601 Chapter Fifteen From Emancipation to Assassination 645 Chapter Sixteen The Redemption of the South and the NAACP 691 Chapter Seventeen The Trial of Leo Frank 707 Chapter Eighteen The Spread of Bolshevism 731 Chapter Nineteen Marcus Garvey 761 Chapter Twenty The Scottsboro Boys 785 Chapter Twenty-One Revolutionary Music in the 1930S 817 Chapter Twenty-Two Lorraine Hansberry 849 Chapter Twenty-Three The Birth of Conservatism 863 Chapter Twenty-Four The Second Vatican Council Begins 883 Chapter Twenty-Five Folk Music meets the Civil Rights Movement 899 10 Chapter Twenty-Six The Sign in Sidney Brustein's Window 905 Chapter Twenty-Seven The Third Session of the Council 917 Chapter Twenty-Eight Jews and Abortion 941 Chapter Twenty-Nine The Black Panthers 949 Chapter Thirty The Messiah Arrives Again 971 Chapter Thirty-One The Jewish Takeover of American Culture Chapter Thirty-Two The Neoconservative Era 1019 Epilogue: The Conversion of the Revolutionary Jew Notes 1079 11 12 Introduction In trod uction On September 12, 2006, Joseph Ratzinger made a triumphal return to his na tive Bavaria. Having chosen the name of Benedict XVI when he was elected pope, His Holiness returned not only to Germany but to the German university of Re gensburg to express his gratitude for the time he spent there as a professor and to renew the Church's commitment to the university. But more than that, Pope Benedict wanted to re-affirm the Church's position on the relationship between faith and reason. In order to do that he had to refer to a tradition where that relationship has not been so complementary, a tradition which stands outside of Europe, namely, Islam. That's where the trouble began, specifically when Benedict quoted the Byzan tine emperor Manuel II Paleologos, who felt that the Islamic world and the Chris tian world shared two fundamentally different views of the relationship between God and reason. The issue was religiously inspired violence: "Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached.'" After an initially favorable response, the world press, including the Arab press, appeared to use the quote to inflame Islamic opinion against the Church. The inflammation was a replay, at least in some ways, of the Danish cartoon crisis of a few months before. In that incident, a Danish magazine editor, with ties to American neoconservatives like Daniel Pipes, ran a series of cartoons that were calculated to outrage Muslims and provoke them to attack Denmark and, by ex tension, Europe. The purpose of the provocation was to drive Europe, by way of reaction to the Muslim outrage, into the arms of the Americans, who were desper ately in need of support for their failing war in Iraq.' In the instance of the Regensburg speech, the outrage surrounding the Man uel II Paleologos quote achieved two ends: first, it strengthened the neoconser vative hold over the Catholic mind by giving the impression that Muslims were fanatics determined to wage jihad against both the pope and the Church (the Muslim/Catholic alliance against abortion, which I personally witnessed at the World Population Conference in Cairo in 1994, gave the opposite impression), and secondly, it obscured the real topic of the talk, which was Logos and the central role it plays in both Europe and the Church. Unlike Christianity, Islam is not docile to Logos, nor for that matter is Islam's God; God's will is arbitrary, inscrutable. According to Benedict's reading of Man uel II Paleologos, "the decisive statement in this argument against violent conver sion is this: not to act in accordance with reason is contrary to God's nature." This idea is not intrinsic to Islam. The "noted French Islamicist R. Arnaldez," Pope 13 The Jewish Revolutionary Spirit Benedict continues, "points out that Ibn Hazm went so far as to state that God is not bound even by his own word, and that nothing would oblige him to reveal the truth to us. Were it God's will, we would even have to practice idolatry." Christianity is different from Islam in this regard: The Christian God acts with Logos. In using the term Logos, the Pope situates Christianity and, byexten sion, the European culture which grew up under its influence, in the tradition of Greek philosophy. Greek philosophy is part of God's plan for humanity, some thing that became clear when St Paul had to change his plans and travel to Mace donia. Greek philosophy is, in other words, not just Greek; it is universal: Is the conviction that acting unreasonably contradicts God's nature merely a Greek idea, or is it always and intrinsically true? I believe that here we can see the profound harmony between what is Greek in the best sense of the word and the biblical understanding of faith in God. Modifying the first verse of the Book of Genesis, the first verse of the whole Bible, John began the prologue of his Gospel with the words: "In the beginning was the logos." This is the very word used by the Emperor: God acts with logos. "In the beginning was the logos, and the logos is God," says the Evangelist. The marriage of Hebrew scripture and Greek philosophy that begat Christi anity and subsequently Europe is not mere coincidence, nor is Greek philosophy some adulteration of an otherwise pure Gospel. Europe means Biblical faith plus Greek thought: Europe is based on Logos. "The encounter between the Biblical message and Greek thought," the pope continues, did not happen by chance. ... Biblical faith ... encountered the best of Greek thought at a deep level, resulting in a mutual enrichment evident in the later wisdom literature. ... A profound encounter of faith and reason is taking place there [in the Septuagint], an encounter between genuine enlightenment and religion. From the very heart of Christian faith, and, at the same time, the heart of Greek thought now joined to faith, Manuel II was able to say: "Not to act 'with logos' is contrary to God's nature. This means that Logos, far from being some cultural accretion, is part of the nature of God and, therefore, part of creation. The European, and by that term I include both North and South America and Australia, is traditionally born into a world that is radically reasonable, radically logical, because that world mirrors the mind of God, who behaves in ways that sometimes go beyond what human reason can comprehend but never in ways that contradict that reason. So far so good. We agree wholeheartedly with what the Pope said about Logos, and we can see without too much effort that Islam has a radically different attitude toward the relationship between faith and reason. Europe has dealt with the threat for centuries, but from an historical perspective, the Islamic threat to Europe is only half the story. At this point we come to the attack on Logos which is not mentioned in the Pope's speech, the Jewish attack on Logos, which manifests itself not by the threat 14 Introduction of invasion from without, as is the case with Islam, which has sought to spread its faith by military conquest, but by the threat of subversion from within, otherwise known as revolution. If Muslims are alogos, because of Mohammed's imperfect understanding of the monotheistic traditions he absorbed from his position be yond the borders of a collapsing Greco-Roman civilization, then Jews are anti Logos, in the sense that they reject Christ altogether. Islam did not reject Christ; Islam failed to understand Christ, as manifested in its rejection of both the Trin ity and the Incarnation, and ended up trying to mask that misunderstanding by honoring Jesus as a prophet. The situation with Jews is completely different. The Jews were God's chosen people. When Jesus arrived on earth as their long-awaited Messiah, the Jews, who, like all men, were given free will by their God, had to make a decision. They had to either accept or reject the Christ, who was, so Christians believe, the physical embodiment of Logos. As we will see, the Jews began by wanting to have the Messiah save them on their terms, which were suffused with racial pride. When the Jews tell Jesus in John 8 that they are the "seed of Abraham," in Greek "sperma Abraam," He changes the term of the argument by replying "If you were Abraham's children, you would do as Abraham did," which is to say follow God's will and accept Jesus as the son of God and Messiah. Since the Jews, or those to whom Jesus is speaking, reject Jesus, they reject their father Abraham as well, and show that "the devil is [their] father." Once Jesus arrives in Jerusalem, the term Jew in the Gospel of St. John is no longer a purely racial term. Jew has come to mean a rejecter of Christ. Race is no longer the focus. The Jews who accept Jesus will henceforth be known as Chris tians. The Jews who reject him are known henceforth as "Jews." As St. John reports in the Apocalypse, "those who call themselves Jews" are really liars and members of the "synagogue of Satan" (Rev 2.9, 3.9). By the middle of John's Gospel, the term Jew no longer has the clear racial meaning it had at the beginning when the Samaritan woman was told that "salva tion is from the Jews." The other, more negative redefinition of the word Jew is also not essentially racial and becomes apparent in the story of the man born blind in John 9. That man's parents, we are told, refused to answer any questions about Jesus healing their son because they feared the "Jews." They "said this because they feared the Jews, for the Jews had already agreed that if anyone should confess him to be Christ, he was to be put out of the synagogue." Clearly the split between "Jews" and followers of Christ had already begun. The Jews rejected Christ because he was crucified. They wanted a powerful leader, not a suffering servant. Annas and Caiaphas mockingly told Christ that if he came down from the cross, they would accept him as the Messiah. When the Jews rejected Christ, they rejected Logos, and when they rejected Logos, which includes within itself the principles of social order, they became revolutionaries. 15

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