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Jerusalem: Legislators take 'Christianity 101'

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  • Jerusalem: Legislators take 'Christianity 101'

    Jerusalem Post
    Jan 20 2005

    Legislators take 'Christianity 101'
    By ETGAR LEFKOVITS


    In the latest sign of the ever-warming Israeli-Christian relations,
    Knesset members from the 'Christian Allies Caucus' and
    representatives of the Chief Rabbinate on Thursday took a snap course
    in Christianity, and then visited the heads of different Christian
    denominations represented in the Holy Land in an effort to bolster
    the cooperation between the two faiths.

    The initiative, carried out in conjunction with the Jerusalem office
    of the American Jewish Committee, which hosted the seminar, offered
    the legislators an opportunity to learn more about the varied and
    diverse branches of Christianity, which they are trying to
    court as supporters.

    "We must understand and internalize that the Christians represent a
    strategic interest for the State of Israel," said caucus co-chairman
    MK Yuri Shtern (National Union) at the event, adding that "it
    is incumbent upon us not just to look out at the Christian world with
    preconceived notions based on relations in the past."

    The Knesset's increasingly influential Christian Allies Caucus, which
    was established last year with 12 MKs from six parties, aims to
    garner the support of, and work with, pro-Israel Christians around
    the world.

    The meeting Thursday, attended by nearly all of the Chief Rabbinate's
    delegation for relations with the Catholic Church, was indicative of
    the growing awareness Israel is placing on the Christian world at
    large, and the Evangelical Christian community in particular.

    "It is important that members of the caucus have a better
    understanding of the Christian world at large, and the potential
    alliances as well as pitfalls, and it is equally important that they
    know that they have the support of the rabbinical establishment,"
    said Rabbi David Rosen, the International Director of Inter-Religious
    Affairs at the American Jewish Committee who presented the group of
    legislators an overview of the different Christian denominations.

    After the lecture, several of the legislators went to the Old City of
    Jerusalem for separate meetings with the Latin and Armenian
    Patriarchs as well as with a representative of the Greek Orthodox
    Patriarchate.

    Calling the interfaith meet, attended by a delegation from the Chief
    Rabbinate, a "breakthrough in Judeo-Christian relations," caucus
    director Josh Reinstein said that the caucus had opened the doors to
    cooperation between Christians and Jews "in a way we never thought
    possible before."
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