Antisemitism in Europe is not a recent phenomenon. It grew over centuries from religion, economics, and politics, and it left scars that shaped Jewish life long before the Holocaust. The Church had the power to challenge it, but too often it did not.
The Religious Blame
The roots of European antisemitism lie in Christian theology. Early Church leaders accused Jews of deicide—the killing of Christ. Saint John Chrysostom, a fourth-century Church Father, preached that Jews were “murderers of the Lord” and “fit for slaughter.” His sermons echoed through medieval Europe, painting Jews as enemies of faith.
This accusation created a permanent shadow. Every Easter, the story of the crucifixion was retold, and mobs sometimes turned against Jewish communities. Hatred became part of religious memory.
The Economic Resentment
Medieval laws excluded Jews from farming land or joining most guilds. Christian teaching also forbade lending money at interest, but Jews were not bound by canon law. Many became moneylenders because few other professions were open to them.
This role made them vulnerable. When debts grew heavy, resentment followed. In 1190, mobs in York attacked Jews after financial disputes. Their homes were burned, and dozens were killed inside the castle tower. Chronicler William of Newburgh admitted that greed, not piety, fueled the violence, yet it was cloaked in religious hostility.
Scapegoats in Times of Crisis
Whenever disaster struck, Jews were blamed. During the Black Death in the 14th century, rumors spread that Jews had poisoned wells. Entire communities were wiped out in Germany and Switzerland. Pope Clement VI tried to intervene, declaring in 1348 that Jews were not guilty of spreading the plague, but local rulers ignored him. The myth of Jewish guilt was stronger than papal words.
The Church’s Role
The Church did not always call for killing Jews, but its actions reinforced their isolation. The Fourth Lateran Council in 1215 decreed that Jews must wear special clothing to distinguish them from Christians. Pope Innocent III defended this order, saying, “The Jews, by their own guilt, are consigned to perpetual servitude.”
This theology of supersession—the belief that Christianity had replaced Judaism—kept Jews in a second-class status. Some Popes offered protection, arguing that Jews should be preserved as witnesses to Christian truth, but that protection was fragile. Expulsions, forced conversions, and pogroms still followed.
Why the Church Did Not Stop It
The Church had authority but also had interests. Monarchs and bishops often used antisemitism for political and financial gain. Expelling Jews allowed rulers to seize property and cancel debts. The Church rarely opposed these acts. Instead, it provided the moral language to justify them.
Historian James Carroll, in Constantine’s Sword, argues: “The teaching of contempt prepared the soil. When the time came, no tree of mercy could grow there.” The Church’s silence—or worse, its participation—turned prejudice into structure.
From Theology to Race
By the 19th century, antisemitism shifted. It was no longer only about religion but also about race and nation. Jews were seen as outsiders who could never belong. This modern antisemitism culminated in the Holocaust, but its foundations were laid long before.
A Long Shadow
The hatred of Jews in Europe came from a mix of faith, fear, and envy. The Church could have stopped it, but often it blessed it instead. The result was centuries of persecution that left Jewish life marked by exile, violence, and suspicion.
Antisemitism today wears different clothes, but its roots are the same: scapegoating, conspiracy, and refusal to see Jews as human equals. That history is not distant. It is alive, and it asks whether societies can finally learn what the Church once refused to say: that Jews, like all people, have the right to live without fear.
Sources
-
Saint John Chrysostom, Adversus Judaeos, 4th century
-
William of Newburgh, Historia Rerum Anglicarum (12th century)
-
Pope Clement VI, Bull against Black Death accusations, 1348
-
Fourth Lateran Council, Canon 68 (1215)
-
James Carroll, Constantine’s Sword: The Church and the Jews, 2001
No comments:
Post a Comment