THE DEATH OF JESUS Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 1 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations A peer-reviewed e-journal of the Council of Centers on Jewish-Christian Relations Published by the Center for Christian-Jewish Learning at Boston College The Jewish Critique of Christianity: In Search of a New Narrative 1 D ani el J. Las k er B e n - G u r i o n U n i v e r s i t y o f t h e N e g e v Volume 6 (2011) http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr 1 This article was first presented at the 2011 Boston College Corcoran Chair Conference Are Jews and Christians Living in a Post-Polemical World? Toward a Comparison of Medieval and Modern Christian-Jewish Encounters. Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations Volume 6(2011): Lasker 1-9 Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 2 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr The old narrative of the Jewish critique of Christianity was simple: Jews criticized Christianity as a reaction to the Christian mission to the Jews; if Christians had not attempted to convince Jews to convert to Christianity, there would have been no reason for Jews to say anything negative about the majority religion. Judaism is a religion of tolerance, at least towards members of other religions if not towards dissident members of its own religion, and, therefore, it was not a Jewish concern how Gentiles worshipped. Since the pious of the nations have a place in the world to come, as long as a Christian is a good person (and did not persecute Jews), he or she would be ―saved‖ (to use a Christian term). But as medieval Christians tried more and more to convince Jews to convert, Jewish think- ers answered this challenge by developing arguments to be used against Christian doctrines. The proliferation of Jewish anti-Christian polemical treatises, with their sharp attacks on Christian doctrines and mores, and their often vituperative lan- guage, was solely a defense mechanism against Christian attacks. In fact, the stronger the Christian pressure on Jews, the nastier and more acerbic was their response. Left alone to themselves, Jews would not have had any need to criticize Christianity. As David Berger once put it: ―Jews had no internal motivation for writing polemics against Christians; in times or places where Christianity is not a threat, we cannot expect Jews to be concerned with the refutation of its claims.‖ 2 2 David Berger, The Jewish-Christian Debate in the High Middle Ages (Phila- delphia, 1979), 7 (reprinted in idem, Persecution, Polemic, and Dialogue: Essays in Jewish-Christian Relations, Boston, 2010, 79). The bibliography of medieval Jewish-Christian polemics and the Jewish critique of Christianity is extensive, but an overall synthesis is still a desideratum. See, in the mean- while, Samuel Krauss and William Horbury, The Jewish-Christian Controversy I (Tübingen, 1995); Heinz Schreckenberg, Die christlichen Adversus-Iudaeos- Texte und ihr literarisches und historisches Umfeld, Vol. I (1-11 Jht), Frankfurt a.M., 1982, Vol. II (11-13 Jht), Frankfurt a.M., 1991, Vol. III (13-20 Jht.), Frankfurt a.M., 1994; Daniel J. Lasker, Jewish Philosophical Polemics Against Christianity in the Middle Ages (New York, 1977), second ed., Oxford, 2007; Robert Chazan, Daggers of Faith (Berkeley, 1989); ibid., Fashioning Jewish Identity in Medieval Western Christendom, (Cambridge, 2004). The traditional narrative can be seen, for instance, in the works of another contemporary expert on the medieval Jewish-Christian debate, Jeremy Cohen, in an article entitled: ―Towards a Functional Classification of Jewish anti-Christian Polemic in the High Middle Ages.‖ 3 Describing the early Middle Ages in Christian Europe, Cohen explains why there were no Jewish anti-Christian treatises before 1170: ―Prior to the Cru- sades churchmen took little initiative in engaging the Jews in actual debate.‖ Therefore, Jews ―had little need of a literature of anti-Christian polemic per se—i.e., texts composed expressly for the purpose of religious disputation—and they therefore produced none.‖ Instead, Jews were satisfied with the tradition- al genres of exegesis, poetry and chronicles to express any anti-Christian sentiments they may have held. By the 12th cen- tury, however, Christian-Jewish polemical encounters were more immediate and more direct. Thus, ―Jewish respondents to Christian invective required more than running commentaries on entire biblical books.‖ Referring to the first Jewish anti- Christian polemics, those of Jacob ben Reuben and Joseph Kimhi in 1170, Cohen states: ―No longer did running commentary on Scripture or did other existing textual genres suffice, although protecting the faith of Jews—and not the denigration of Christianity per se—remained the goal of the new treatises, even as their agenda now followed the lead of their Christian opponents (emphasis in the original).‖ The new Jewish polemical treatises of the 12th and 13th centu- ries ―attest to the rising frequency of the new Christian challenge to the Jewish community and to the concomitant Jewish need for guidance in responding.‖ Cohen‘s article pro- ceeds in the same fashion, finding an external cause for every 3 In Bernard Lewis and Friedrich Niewöhner, eds., Religionsgespräche in Mit- telalter (Wiesbaden, 1992) 93-114. The citations are on pp. 96-97, 100-102. Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations Volume 6(2011): Lasker 1-9 Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 3 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr change he perceives in the medieval Jewish polemical litera- ture. In another article, on the Jewish criticism of Christianity, Cohen outlines the sad history of European Jewry and states that "these developments obviously fueled the hatred of the Jews for the Christian population in whose midst they lived." Furthermore, he states: "When removed from real contact with Christians and its concomitant dangers, Jews did not have much reason to polemicize against Christianity. Medieval Jewish anti- Christian polemic developed almost completely in re- sponse [emphasis in original] to Christian anti- Judaism." 4 Two other experts of the medieval debate, Ora Limor and Israel Jacob Yuval, summarize the traditional narrative in this manner: "Throughout the history of the polemic between the two reli- gions the Christians have been the initiators while the Jews have felt themselves obliged to respond." 5 I, myself, have had recourse to the traditional narrative. When I started writing about medieval polemics over 35 years ago, I also assumed that the Jewish critique of Christianity was defensive in nature. For instance I explained on the first page of my first book that polemical writings were a function of the fact that many Jews did not remain passive in the face of the Chris- tian challenge to their religion. On the second page, I mentioned Jewish polemics against Christianity in Islamic coun- tries when Jews were not under compulsion to convert to 4 Jeremy Cohen, ―Medieval Jews on Christianity: Polemical Strategies and Theological Defense‖ in Eugene J. Fisher, Interwoven Destinies: Jews and Christians through the Ages (New York, 1993), 77-89; the citations are on pp. 78, 80. 5 "Skepticism and Conversion: Jews, Christians, and Doubters in Sefer ha- Nizzahon," in Allison P. Coudert and Jeffrey S. Shoulson, eds., Hebraica Veri- tas? Christian Hebraists and the Study of Judaism in Early Modern Europe (Philadelphia, 2004), 159-180; the citation is on p. 160. Christianity, but I quickly jumped to Western Europe where, I wrote, ―the defense of Judaism, with its concomitant attack on Christianity, reached its fullest development.‖ Referring to the twelfth century, I wrote that ―as the Christian pressure intensi- fied in that century, Jews felt a need to compose books that would help them meet the challenge of the dominant religion.‖ 6 Fifteen years later I wrote that: ―it is generally recognized that Jewish anti-Christian po- lemical compositions written in Christian countries were primarily intended for internal use in the war against missionary activity. When that activity was either limited or fairly nonexistent, i.e., until the end of the twelfth cen- tury, there were no Jewish literary works devoted to combating the arguments of Christians in those coun- tries.‖ 7 These words were written in an article about the Jewish critique of Christianity in Islamic countries, so even though I understood that those latter works had nothing to do with a Christian mis- sion, I still propounded the old narrative concerning Jewish polemics written in Christian countries. Soon afterwards, in Sarah Stroumsa‘s and my edition of the Judaeo-Arabic Qissat Mujadalat al-Usquf (The Account of the Disputation of the Priest) and its Hebrew translation, Sefer Nestor ha-Komer (The Book of Nestor the Priest), we wrote concerning the Hebrew version of the polemic: ―Nestor represents the transition from the use of anti- Christian argumentation in an environment in which Christianity was not the majority religion, to the use of 6 Lasker, Jewish Philosophical Polemics, 1-2. 7 Idem, "The Jewish Critique of Christianity Under Islam," Proceedings of the American Academy for Jewish Research 57 (1991): 121. Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations Volume 6(2011): Lasker 1-9 Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 4 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr the same argumentation under Christian rule where the threat of conversion was more explicit. As a result, the language of the Disputation becomes more vio- lent…While Qissa has no qualms with regard to vulgarity of expression, certain sections of the Arabic definitely pale in comparison with their Hebrew equiva- lents.‖ 8 In sum, the accepted wisdom has been to the effect that the Jewish critique of Christianity was written in response to Chris- tian missionary pressure and that the level of its vituperativeness is a function of Christian antagonism to Jews and Judaism. When examining the traditional narrative, we see it has one great advantage—it is very comfortable for Jews. Jews, especially in the modern period, like to present themselves as tolerant of other religions. They also like to be seen as the vic- tims in interreligious exchanges, always the subject of persecution, discrimination and hostility and never the purvey- ors of these activities. The lachrymose conception of Jewish history, a locution coined by the Jewish historian Salo Wittmay- er Baron, is quite conducive to the traditional Jewish self- image. 9 When 19th-century German-Jewish historians reviewed the Jewish past, they did so in an atmosphere of denial of Jew- ish rights; they were not about to reveal to their readers the historical Jewish antagonism to non-Jews in general and to Christians in particular. Thus, a Jewish critique of Christianity in the absence of a Christian missionary threat might mean that Jews were taking the initiative and were trying, unprovoked, to convince Christians of the falseness of their religion. If, on the medieval playing field, Jews were playing offense as well as 8 Idem and Sarah Stroumsa, The Polemic of Nestor the Priest, vol. 1 (Jerusa- lem, 1996), 30. 9 See, e.g., Salo W. Baron, History and Jewish Historians, eds. Arthur Hertzberg and Leon A. Feldman (Philadelphia, 1964), 64, 88, 96. defense, this would be an uncomfortable fact for modern Jew- ish apologists. Today, however, Jews and Christians can attempt to write our joint history with fewer vested interests and with greater honesty as Israel Yuval states. 10 Thus, when it comes to the Jewish critique of Christianity, we may now begin questioning the traditional narrative and looking for a more his- torically accurate account of this enterprise. 11 Why is the traditional Jewish narrative concerning Jew- ish-Christian polemics no longer tenable? One may begin with the Jewish critique of Christianity in Islamic countries. For the first 800 years or so of Christianity, Jewish reactions to the new religion were rather muted. Without getting into a discussion of the exact relationship between that which became Christianity and that which became Rabbinic Judaism, a narrative clash in its own right, 12 it is clear that there were many Christians in the- se centuries who wrote treatises in the genre of Adversus Judaeos, and not one Jew who wrote an Adversus Chris- tianos. 13 Anti-Christian material in Rabbinic writings is often allusive and elusive, rarely mentioning Christians and Christian- ity by name. 14 The Jewish parody of the New Testament, 10 Israel Jacob Yuval, Two Nations in your Womb (Berkeley, 2006), 20-21. 11 The search for a new narrative for the Jewish critique of Christianity is somewhat parallel to the emerging new narrative concerning medieval Jew- ish-Christian relations in general; see Daniel J. Lasker, ―From Victim to Murderer: The Jewish-Christian Encounter in the Middle Ages–Historiography in the Wake of the Establishment of a Jewish State,‖ Remembering and For- getting. Israeli Historians Look at the Jewish Past (= Zion, 74) (2008), 95-108 (Hebrew). 12 See, e.g., Daniel Boyarin, Border Lines: The Partition of Judaeo- Christianity (Philadelphia, 2004); idem, Dying for God: Martyrdom and the Making of Christianity and Judaism (Stanford, 1999); and cf. Stuart S. Miller, ―Roman Imperialism, Jewish Self-Definition and Rabbinic Society: Belayche‘s Iudaea-Palaestina, Schwartz‘s Imperialism and Jewish Society, and Boyarin‘s Border Lines Reconsidered,‖ AJS Review 312 (2007): 329-362. 13 See Schreckenberg, Die christlichen Adversus-Iudaeos-Texte, vol. 1. 14 See R. Travers Herford, Christianity in Talmud and Midrash, different edi- tions; Peter Schaefer, Jesus in the Talmud (Princeton, 2007). Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations Volume 6(2011): Lasker 1-9 Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 5 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr Toledot Yeshu (The History of Jesus), is intended to ridicule the Gospels but not to provide arguments against Christian doc- trines. 15 Thus, even in areas where Jews were a minority vis-à- vis a Christian majority, such as in the Byzantine Empire, in- cluding in the Land of Israel from the fourth to seventh centuries, there is not one Jewish polemical treatise. This all changes under Islam. The first Jewish polemics were written in Judaeo-Arabic in the ninth century, some by an identifiable Jewish thinker, Dawud al-Muqammas, 16 the first medieval Jewish philosopher, and some in another work, the aforementioned Account of the Disputation of the Priest, by an anonymous author. 17 In the tenth century, anti-Christian arguments can be seen at length in the works of the Rabbanite Rav Saadia Gaon and of the Kara- ites Yaqub al-Qirqisani and Yefet ben Eli. In the 11th and 12th centuries, Karaite and Rabbanite authors continued to provide arguments against Christianity, even if new polemical treatises were not composed. A major center of anti-Christian literary activity was in Andalusia. It is true that there was a relatively large Christian presence in Islamic countries, but there was cer- tainly no organized Christian mission to the Jews which, if the old narrative were to be believed, would be necessary to form the occasion for Jewish anti-Christian polemics. 18 15 In the absence of a good edition of the text, Samuel Krauss, Das Leben Jesu nach juedischem Quellen (Berlin, 1902) is still useful. On the nature of this work, see David Biale, ―Counter-History and Jewish Polemics Against Christianity: The Sefer toldot yeshu and the Sefer zerubavel,” Jewish Social Studies 6:1 (1999): 130-145. 16 See Sarah Stroumsa, Dawud ibn Marwan al-Muqammis's Twenty Chapters ( c Ishrun Maqala) (Leiden, 1989). Prof. Stroumsa now believes the name should be pronounced al-Muqammas. 17 See Lasker and Stroumsa, Nestor. 18 For an overview of the Jewish critique of Christianity in Muslim countries, see Lasker, ―Jewish Critique of Christianity under Islam.‖ The Jewish critique of Christianity in Muslim countries is not the only indication of such a critique in the absence of Christian conversionary pressure on Jews. Interestingly enough, 17th- and 18th-century Italy was also the home of much Jewish anti-Christian literature, both in Hebrew and in the vernacular. During this period, there was no organized Chris- tian missionary campaign, although Italian Jews, confined mostly to ghettoes, were made to see themselves as outsiders in Christian society. An upswing in the number of Jewish con- versions to Christianity in Italy may have motivated some anti- Christian authors, but the proliferation of polemical treatises does not appear to be a reaction to any particular Christian as- sault on Judaism, demonstrating once again that Jews do not necessarily need an active Christian mission to compose anti- Christian treatises. 19 If we look at the other side of the coin, namely, what was transpiring in medieval Christendom, there are more and more reasons to assume that Christians were not as active in their anti-Jewish campaigns as was once thought. David Berger has argued that in the 12th century the proliferation of Christian anti-Jewish treatises was a reaction to Jewish challenges to Christianity and not part of an organized Christian attempt to convert Jews. Berger detects a certain reluctance on the part of 12th-century Christian writers to compose their anti-Jewish treatises, most of whom claim, at least outwardly, that they were forced to address these issues because of Jewish chal- lenges. 20 And when we look at the iconic 13th century, the 19 See, e.g., David J. Malkiel, Ha-pulmus ha-yehudi-nozri erev ha-et ha- hadashah: Yehoshua Segri mi-Skandi'ano ve-hiburo “Asham Talui‖ (Jerusa- lem, 2004); Daniel J. Lasker, ―Anti-Christian Polemics in Eighteenth-Century Italy,‖ in Proceedings of the Eleventh World Congress of Jewish Studies, Di- vision B, Vol. 1 (Jerusalem, 1994), 185-192 (Hebrew); idem, ―‗Sefer Herev Pifiyyot‘ of Saul ben Joseph Merari (?). An Italian Jewish Anti-Christian Po- lemic of the Eighteenth Century,‖ Italia 12 (1996): 7-35 (Hebrew section). 20 David Berger, "Mission to the Jews and Jewish-Christian Contacts in the Polemical Literature of the High Middle Ages," The American Historical Re- Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations Volume 6(2011): Lasker 1-9 Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 6 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr century of public disputations and the so-called assault of the friars upon the Jews, 21 here, too, new and innovative research has called into question the extent of the Christian missionary campaign. Robin Vose‘s book on 13th-century Dominicans in Iberia presents Dominican archival records which indicate that in general the Preaching Order gave conversion of the Jews very low priority among its various goals. 22 Other recent works concerning Christian polemical literature question its missionary intent, such as Irven M. Resnick‘s introduction to his translation of Peter Alfonsi‘s Dialogue against the Jews, 23 and Alexandra Cuffel‘s Gendering Disgust in Medieval Religious Polemic which discusses the uses made of Jewish, Christian, and Mus- lim polemics for self-perception and for boundary-marking without their having been necessarily part of a missionary or anti-missionary campaign. 24 There is yet another factor. As part of the traditional nar- rative, it was assumed that Jewish invective against Christianity is a function of Christian pressure upon Jews. Attempts have been made at gauging the extent of Christian pressure upon Jews by measuring the acerbity of Jewish polemics. 25 Yet, here again, the facts do not always fit the theory. Some of the nasti- est Jewish polemics were composed when there was little or no Christian mission to the Jews, starting out with the Judaeo- Arabic Account of the Disputation of the Priest. Jacob ben view 91:3 (June, 1986): 576-591 (reprinted in idem, Persecution, Polemic, and Dialogue, 177-198). 21 Jeremy Cohen, The Friars and the Jews (Ithaca, 1982). 22 Robin J. E. Vose, Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of Aragon (Cambridge, 2009). 23 Peter Alfonsi, Dialogue Against the Jew, transl. by Irven M. Resnick (Washington, DC, 2006), 13-17. 24 Alexandra Cuffel, Gendering Disgust in Medieval Religious Polemic, (Notre Dame, IN, 2007). 25 Hanne Trautner-Kromann, Shield and Sword: Jewish Polemics against Christianity and the Christians in France and Spain (Tübingen, 1993). Reuben‘s Wars of the Lord from 1170 includes nasty passages such as the Jewish author‘s telling his Christian interlocutor that the latter would accept the Jewish arguments if he had a brain in his skull. 26 Two-hundred years later, in a period where Chris- tian conversionary pressure was much more acute than in Jacob's day, Shem Tov ibn Shaprut in Navarre wrote his own polemic based on Jacob‘s Wars of the Lord, stating that one of his goals was to tone down the vituperativeness of the earlier work since it was inappropriate in his own time. 27 And if we look at Hasdai Crescas‘s Refutation of the Christian Principles, 28 written in 1398 in the wake of his son‘s murder in the riots of 1391, it would be harder to find a more restrained, sober po- lemical work. 29 True, the late 13th-century Nizzahon Yashan, composed at a time of great Christian pressure is full of invec- tive, but at the end of the next century, Yom Tov Lipmann Mühlhausen's Nizzahon, composed in the wake of the execu- tion of Prague Jews on the basis of the accusations of a Jewish convert to Christianity, is much more restrained. 30 In light of these examples, it would seem that one cannot learn anything about the context of a polemic by the tone or argumentation of the author since the styles were often dictated by the author‘s personal predilections or the needs of the audience. 31 In addi- tion, one should remember that Jewish invective against Christianity also appears in non-polemical contexts, such as in 26 Jacob ben Reuben and Sefer Milhamot Ha-Shem, ed. by Judah Rosenthal, (Jerusalem, 1963), 13. 27 Shem Tov believed that Joseph Kimhi was the author of Wars of the Lord; see José-Vicente Niclós, Sem Tob Ibn Saprut. “La Piedra de Toque” (Eben Bohan). Una Obra de Controversia Judeo-Cristiana (Madrid, 1997), 7. 28 Daniel J. Lasker, The Refutation of the Christian Principles by Hasdai Crescas (Albany, 1992). 29 Heinrich Graetz attributed Crescas‘s restrained tone to the fact that the intended readership was Christian, but that theory is very unlikely; see ibid. 30 Limor and Yuval, "Skepticism and Conversion," pp. 168-169. 31 See Daniel J. Lasker, ―Popular Polemics and Philosophical Truth in the Medieval Jewish Critique of Christianity,‖ Journal of Jewish Thought and Phi- losophy 8:2 (1999): 243-259. Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations Volume 6(2011): Lasker 1-9 Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 7 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr the malediction of the minim where, in certain versions in Mus- lim countries, Christians are mentioned specifically. 32 Thus, one can hardly say that Jewish acerbity vis-à-vis Christianity in the polemics is purely a function of negative Christian behavior to- wards Jews. 33 If the old narrative is no longer viable, is there a new narrative? Although some of the conclusions here are tentative, they may point towards the construction of a new narrative. First of all, the old narrative is not entirely wrong. Certainly there were times and places where we can see a clear correla- tion between Christian pressures and Jewish responses. Two good examples are in 13th-century Northern Europe and late 14th- and early 15th-century Iberia. In 1240 and in the early 1270s there were two public disputations in Paris. The earlier and more famous of these led to the burning of the Talmud; 34 the later one was a reprise of the Disputation of Barcelona in 1263 apparently with the same Christian protagonist, Pablo Christiani. 35 The 13th century was a time of blood libels and host desecration accusations. 36 There also seem to have been a relatively large number of Jewish conversions to Christianity. It is during this period that the first Northern European, or Ash- kenazic, polemical treatises were composed and there seems to be a direct link between these new works and Christian 32 Uri Ehrlich and Ruth Langer, ―The Earliest Texts of the Birkat Haminim,‖ Hebrew Union College Annual 76 (2005): 63-112. 33 See also the material accumulated by Yuval in his Two Nations in your Womb. 34 The literature on this disputation is extensive; see recently Saadia R. Ei- senberg, ―Reading Medieval Religious Disputation: The 1240 ‗Debate‘ between Rabbi Yehiel of Paris and Friar Nicholas Donin,‖ diss., University of Michigan, 2008. A paraphrastic translation is provided by Hyam Maccoby, Judaism on Trial (Rutherford, 1982), 153-162. 35 Joseph Shatzmiller, La deuxième controverse de Paris (Paris-Louvain, 1994). 36 See Miri Rubin, Gentile Tales: The Narrative Assault on Late Medieval Jews (Philadelphia, 2004). pressure upon Jews. The older Ashkenazic tradition of reacting towards Christianity through biblical exegesis, chronicles, or poetry was, indeed, no longer sufficient. The last quarter of the 14th century and the first half of the 15th century were particularly difficult for Iberian Jewry. In 1391 there were anti-Jewish riots throughout Iberia which left many Jews dead and others forcibly baptized. In 1413-1414 there was the last major public disputation in Tortosa, notewor- thy not so much for the arguments adduced but by the length of time in which the prominent rabbis of Spain were forced away from their communities to give the Christian missionaries free reign to try to convert the leaderless Jews. 37 And, indeed, from 1375 to 1440 or so, there are quite a number of Iberian Jewish anti-Christian polemics, many of them marked by a new type of philosophical argument and by innovative genres (for instance, the satirical letter). 38 In this case as well, there is a relation be- tween the historical events of the day and the proliferation of Jewish polemical activity. The point, nevertheless, is that this relationship is not necessary. As noted, Jews wrote polemical treatises in the ab- sence of a Christian conversionary mission, indicating that they did not need a so-called Christian threat to refute Christian doc- trines. Why? Among other reasons, because Christianity arrogates to itself what Jews see as their patrimony—the name Israel, the God of Israel, the patriarchs, the Hebrew scriptures, the promises to Israel, the concept of messiah—as well as pre- senting theological challenges concerning the nature of God (triune or internally simple), humanity (sinful in need of redemp- tion or not intrinsically sinful), the validity of the commandments 37 On Tortosa, see Yitzhaq Baer, A History of the Jews of Christian Spain, vol. 2 (Philadelphia, 1966), 170-243. 38 These works includes Crescas, Refutation; Profiat Duran‘s Kelimmat ha- goyyim and Iggeret al tehi ka-avotekha; Shem Tov Ibn Shaprut‘s Even Bohan, and the polemical chapters of Joseph Albo‘s Book of Principles. Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations Volume 6(2011): Lasker 1-9 Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 8 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr (abrogation or ongoing validity) and hopes for the future (no Jewish restoration or a renewed Jewish polity). A Jew reflecting on Jewish theology would naturally find Christianity offensive and worthy of refutation, even more so than Islam which did not practice the same sort of appropriation of Jewish sancta and whose theology contains doctrines more in line with Jewish ones. Who were the Jews who first reflected on Jewish theol- ogy? They were not the rabbis of the first Christian centuries, and not the Jews of Christendom in the early Middle Ages, es- pecially Ashkenazic Jews, for whom theological reflection was far from their intellectual outlook. The first authors of polemical treatises or arguments were philosopher-theologians: Dawud al-Muqammas, Saadia Gaon, and the Karaite Yaqub al- Qirqisani. They were also the first Jews to discuss God‘s unity in philosophical terms, including issues of divine attributes and what it means that God is one. 39 It would obviously make sense that these thinkers would take on, and refute, the Christian doc- trine of a triune God just as they refuted Gnostic dualism and other unacceptable theological views. Living among members of other religions who denied the ongoing validity of Jewish law, it was natural for Jewish thinkers to refute Christian views of abrogation, just as they objected to the same Islamic doctrine. And living in what for them was an unredeemed world, they speculated on the meaning of the biblical promises for the sal- vation of Israel, criticizing those who believed that those 39 These discussions were motivated by parallel treatments of these subjects in the branch of Islamic theology called Kalam; see Harry A. Wolfson, The Philosophy of the Kalam (Cambridge, MA, 1976); idem, Repercussions of the Kalam in Jewish Philosophy (Cambridge, MA, 1979). The polemical input into philosophical discussions of divine unity is analyzed by Daniel J. Lasker, ―Def- initions of 'One' and Divine Unity,‖ in S.O. Heller-Wilenski and M. Idel, eds., Studies in Jewish Thought (Jerusalem, 1989), 51-61 (Hebrew). Undoubtedly, the existence of inter-religious polemic in contemporary Christian and Muslim philosophical works and the active Christian-Muslim debate served as models for Jewish philosophers as well. promises had already been fulfilled. 40 Thus, polemics against Christianity became an integral subset of Jewish philosophy, and most medieval Jewish philosophers, from al-Muqammas and Saadia at the beginning to Hasdai Crescas, Joseph Albo and Isaac Abravanel at the end, reacted negatively towards Christianity, without their having been necessarily a relationship to an active Christian mission. Some Jewish philosophers in- cluded anti-Christian comments in their philosophical works, while others were motivated to write full-fledged polemical trea- tises. 41 Just as Christians felt an internal need to react to Judaism in the Adversus Judaeos genre, medieval Jewish phi- losophers, in both Muslim and Christian countries, used their opposition to Christianity as a way of defining Jewish thought. If we go from the Muslim Middle East where Jewish anti-Christian polemics began, to 11th- and 12th-century Anda- lusia, we see that the Jews of the peninsula, for whom rational speculation was an important part of their culture, contributed to the anti-Christian tradition. The Andalusians passed this tradi- tion on to the Jews of Southern France (collectively called Provence in Jewish sources), where rational thought, and anti- Jewish polemics, were previously unknown. The Jewish ration- alists of Provence also seemed to have had their own personal need to combat Christianity—they had become friends and col- leagues with Christians and thus they were moved to make sure that the boundaries between the religions were not 40 The relation between these issues and anti-Christian polemic are seen clearly in Saadia Gaon‘s Book of Opinions and Doctrines; see Daniel J. Las- ker, ―Saadya Gaon on Christianity and Islam,‖ in Daniel Frank, ed., The Jews of Medieval Islam: Community, Society, and Identity (Leiden, 1995), 165-177. 41 The most prominent medieval Jewish philosopher, Maimonides, did not write a polemic against Christianity, but has multiple negative references to them in his works; see idem, ―Tradition and Innovation in Maimonides‘ Atti- tude toward Other Religions,‖ in Jay M. Harris, ed., Maimonides after 800 Years: Essays on Maimonides and His Influence, (Cambridge, MA / London, 2007), 167-182. Studies in Christian-Jewish Relations Volume 6(2011): Lasker 1-9 Lasker, The Jewish Critique of Christianity Lasker 9 http://ejournals.bc.edu/ojs/index.php/scjr blurred. 42 This pattern continued for the duration of Jewish life in Provence until Jews were expelled from there. This is the picture, then, at least until the end of the 12th century before the beginning of serious Christian conversionary campaigns: 43 the Jewish critique of Christianity was a facet of Jewish philosophy with little relation to an actual Christian threat. 44 In the 13th-century, Christian pressure intensified and the old narrative is now relevant, so much so that even Jews in Ashkenaz who were not reflective theologians began compos- ing polemical treatises. The 13th and 14th centuries were times of extreme Christian pressure on Jews. Even if we accept Rob- in Vose's conclusions that the Dominican archives show that conversion of the Jews was not a primary Christian concern, we should remember that contemporary Jews were not privy to those archives and from their own point of view, they were the center of unwanted Christian attention. Whatever the purpose of the Christian-initiated public debates or the Christian proto- cols which they produced, there is no doubt that certain Christians, such as the 13th-century Pablo Christiani or the 14th-century Abner of Burgos/Alfonso de Valladolid, were in- volved in vigorous missionary activities. 45 Those centuries were 42 Idem, ―Christianity, Philosophy and Polemic in Jewish Provence,‖ Zion 68:3 (2003): 313-333 (Hebrew). 43 See Chazan, Daggers of Faith. 44 When Jacob ben Reuben and Joseph Kimhi were writing in approximately 1170, the situation was changing, and both authors indicate that they were reacting to anti-Jewish Christian pressure. But these were not the only factors which led to their composing polemical treatises; see ibid., and idem, ―Jewish- Christian Polemics in Transition: From the Lands of Ishmael to the Lands of Edom,‖ in Benjamin Hary, et al., eds., Judaism and Islam: Boundaries, Inter- action, and Communication (Leiden, 2000), 53-65; and idem, ―Jewish- Christian Polemics at the Turning Point: Jewish Evidence from the Twelfth Century,‖ Harvard Theological Review 89:2 (1996): 161-173. 45 Nahmanides describes Pablo as having engaged him in debate about the Trinity in Gerona before the events of 1263 in Barcelona (Judaism on Trial, 144); and later he appeared in Paris initiating another public debate (Shatzmiller, Deuxième controverse). Abner of Burgos wrote treatises in He- the heyday of the Jewish critique of Christianity, feeding nicely into the traditional narrative of Jewish polemics as a response to Christianity. The situation of Christian pressure and Jewish response continued in Iberia into the 15th-century, but seems to have abated in other areas of western Europe in light of the expulsions of Jews from these countries. If, however, we look at the entire course of the Middle Ages, Christian mission was not the only reason for a Jewish critique of Christianity. 46 In response to the search for a new narrative of the me- dieval Jewish critique of Christianity, it would have been nice to find some sort of uniform field theory which covered all Jewish argumentation against Christianity, one overarching account of why Jews engaged in polemics, composing treatises devoted specifically to the defense of Judaism and the criticism of Chris- tianity. But, as of now, there is no one unique explanation. In sum, a close look at the Jewish critique of Christianity indicates that some Jewish authors were responding directly to overt Christian missionary challenges, hoping that their arguments would convince their fellow Jews not to abandon the religion of their fathers. Others saw criticism of Christianity as part of their rational exposition of Judaism. Others may have understood it as part of Jewish self-definition and a marking of borders. One thing seems to be certain: medieval Jews did not offer refuta- tions of Christianity solely as a reaction to a perceived Christian threat. The Jewish critique of Christianity is much more com- plex than that. brew intended specifically for Jewish audiences; for a comprehensive review of Abner‘s life and works, see Ryan W. Szpiech, ―From Testimonia to Testi- mony: Thirteenth-Century Anti-Jewish Polemic and the Monstrador de justicia of Abner of Burgos/Alfonso de Valladolid,‖ diss., Yale University, 2006. Both Pablo and Abner were converts to Christianity from Judaism. 46 The state of Jewish anti-Christian polemics in the early modern and mod- ern periods, such as the proliferation of treatises in Italy and the relative dearth of such works in eastern Europe, should be studied in light of the con- clusions expressed in this paper.