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‘No Christian seders’: Plea from Episcopal bishop

ST. LOUIS — For years, a growing number of Jews have issued the same public request ahead of Passover: Christians, please don’t hold your own seders glorifying Jesus.

(Paschal Deloche/Getty)

Now, some Christian clergy are passing that same message onto their followers.

Last month, the Episcopal bishop of Missouri, the Rev. Deon K. Johnson, posted an open letter to his diocese saying that Christian seders are “banned” because they advance supersessionism — the belief that Christians have superseded, or replaced, Jews as G-d’s chosen people.

This doctrine was invoked for nearly two millennia to justify the mass murder of Jews.

In his letter, Johnson explicitly forbade his congregation from “hosting, holding or celebrating Christian seders.”

“In our own time, the proliferation of Christian Seders on Maundy Thursday has taken root in parts of Christianity,” Johnson wrote, referring to the Thursday before Easter, which fell this year on April 6 and commemorates Jesus’ last supper.

“Christians celebrating their own Haggadah outside of Jewish practice is deeply problematic and is supersessionism in its theological view.

“Christian communities hosting seders is additionally problematic because it contributes to the objectification of our Jewish neighbors.”

Christian seders are linked with the popular notion that the last supper was itself a seder, a belief that scholars have disputed because the seder as is now known was developed after Jesus’ death.

“To put it bluntly, Jesus certainly celebrated Passover, but neither he nor his disciples ever attended a seder, any more than they drove a car or used a cell phone,” wrote Rabbis Yehiel Poupko and David Sandmel in Christianity Today in 2017.

The seder came into play after the destruction of the Second Temple, when it was no more possible to sacrifice the Pascal lamb. The seder is a remembrance of Passover in the Temple as well as of the Exodus from Egypt.

Last year, Bishop Jennifer Reddall of the Episcopal Diocese of Arizona echoed that idea when she also warned against holding Christian seders.

“Jesus did not eat matzah ball soup or gefilte fish, sing Dayenu, or say ‘next year in Jerusalem,’’’ Reddall said. “For Jesus, the seder would have consisted of a lamb sacrificed in the Temple and eaten in Jerusalem, not a brisket cooked in Nashville.”

Photos of Christian seders on social media show elements that would be out of place at a traditional Jewish seder, such as bread and Christian symbols such as the cross.

Such seders are also held by “Messianic” Jews — a movement that believes in the divinity of Jesus, adopts Jewish symbols, and considered non-Jewish by Jewish groups.

The photos of Christian seders have sparked backlash from Jews. In 2020, Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg tweeted, “Jesus didn’t have a seder, Christianity is not Judaism, please respect us and our traditions.”



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