Following Pope Leo’s recent appeal for peace amid the U.S. airstrikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities, Orthodox Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt offered a pointed biblical response, drawing from the Old Testament to underscore the complex nature of conflict and peace.
The Pope had tweeted: “War does not solve problems; on the contrary, it amplifies them and inflicts deep wounds on the history of peoples, which take generations to heal. No armed victory can compensate for the pain of mothers, the fear of children, or stolen futures. May diplomacy silence the weapons! May nations chart their futures with works of peace, not with violence and bloodstained conflicts!”
In reply, Rabbi Goldschmidt cited Ecclesiastes 3:8: “There is a time to love and there is a time to hate. There is a time for war and there is a time for peace. There is a season and time for everything under the sun…”
Rabbi Goldschmidt, born in Zurich in 1963, served as Chief Rabbi of Moscow from 1993 until 2022, leading the historic Moscow Choral Synagogue and founding the Moscow Rabbinical Court for the Commonwealth of Independent States. He also served as President of the Conference of European Rabbis, representing over 700 communal rabbis, and in 2024 was awarded the prestigious Charlemagne Prize for promoting peace and European unity.
War solved the Nazi problem in Rome in WWll dummy
ReplyDeleteIt appears that His Holiness never had a course in the history of the Church. Go to the following link: https://www.ourhistory.org.uk/holy-wars-the-blood-soaked-legacy-of-conflicts-fought-in-the-name-of-christianity/
ReplyDeleteThe real answer to the criticisms coming from the "baseball Pope" is:
ReplyDeleteThe lesson from 1,000 years of wars and bloodshed in Christian lands is, that appeasement is provocative.
Hey, Robbie, how about those "works of peace" your own crusaders did?
ReplyDelete