Sunday, 24 February 2008

other calumny of jeffrey john



The other calumny of Jeffrey John

Jeffrey John needs little introduction to British evangelicals: he

made headlines in 2003 when he was the first person to have openly

been in a sexually active gay relationship to be nominated to be a

Church of England bishop. Owing to the consequent controversy, he was

asked by archbishop Rowan Williams to stand down before he took up the

bishopric. More recently, he has been rightly criticised by

evangelical bishops for denying the doctrine of penal substitution. On

Good Friday, however, he committed another calumny: he said that

Jesus' Jewish disciples would have made "good Nazis".

Yes, he actually compared Jews to Nazis, a comparison which surely is

as offensive as any, but sadly is all too widespread, whether in Ken

Livingstone's likening of Jewish reporter to a concentration guard, or

in the iniquitous inversion of terminology in the Arab-Israeli

conflict where Israel is compared to the Nazi (the well-documented

Nazi roots, salutes and sieg(heil)s of Islamic antisemitism

notwithstanding).

I would hope that, if his statement was to become more widely known,

the evangelical protests would be at least as loud as those over his

sexual practices and doctrinal heresies; if not, it would sadly

confirm the sneaking suspicion of many British Messianic Jews that

antisemitism is British evangelicalism's "acceptable sin".


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