The Church of England will hold an unprecedented ‘act of repentance’ service for the medieval expulsion of Jews in 1290 and other anti-Semitic acts. The move comes as the 800th anniversary approaches of the 1222 Oxford Synod, which introduced notorious anti-Semitic laws, including forcing Jews to wear clothing to distinguish them from Christians. Despite the CofE not existing in the 13th century (Henry VIII created it much later), Justin Welby’s office said it is exploring the idea of such a service, in conjunction with the Council of Christians and Jews, as well as the potential for a liturgical resource that might be offered to local churches to model an appropriate symbolic repentance. David Rich of Community Security Trust labelled the apology a case of ‘better late than never. The historic trauma of medieval English antisemitism can never be erased, and its legacy survives today with rising anti-Semitism’.
CofE’s repentance for historic anti-Semitism
Written by David Fletcher 23 Jul 2021Additional Info
- Pray: for the support and empathy of the Church of England for our Jewish community to remind people that anti-Semitism is not accepted in 2021. (Acts 3:19)
- More: www.cufi.org.uk/news/church-of-england-to-hold-act-of-repentance-for-historic-anti-semitism/
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