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Cabbage
Not Blood
By Fr. Jude Eli,
O.P.
We
started to make our final descent to land at the Nairobi
airport in Kenya. As I looked out my window I could see the
various types of trees always associated with African
terrain. It was 6:20 in the morning and the flight from
Amsterdam was exhausting. I was glad the plane was landing.
After going through customs I was met by Fr. Maury Schepers,
O.P. the Vicar for the Vicariate of Eastern Africa and Bro.
Daniel Thomas, O.P. of our own Western Dominican Province.
As we drove to our Dominican community house at Spring
Valley, I discussed with Fr. Maury the details of what I was
going to do during my stay. I was asked to teach a course on
biblical hermeneutics to a group of novices and other people
in formation at our novitiate in Kisumu, as well as a class
on the Gospel of Mark to our Dominican Nuns at Corpus
Christi Monastery in Karen, a small town outside of Nairobi.
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Fr. Jude Eli, O.P.
teaching a course on
biblical hermeneutics in Kisumu, Kenya |
The next day after a
long eight-hour drive from Spring Valley to Kisumu, I was
welcomed by our Dominican novices and Fr. Ben Croell, O.P.,
their novice master. As I looked around the Dominican
compound, I realized that Kisumu was not Nairobi. Kisumu is
rural and poor – dirt poor. It made me wonder in terms of
education what kind of students I would have the following
Monday. I would soon find out.
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Fr. Jude Eli (center)
with his students in Kisumu, Kenya. |
Monday morning was clear and
temperate. The room where I was going to have class was
spacious, with plenty of desks and blackboard space. After
Fr. Ben introduced me to the students, (postulants and
novices from various African nations and religious
communities), I began a general presentation on the nature
of biblical hermeneutics. Hermeneutics concerns itself with
the method and mode of interpreting, explaining, and
applying the meaning and the understanding of words found in
sacred scripture.
There are many
hermeneutical methods and each has its own way of making
intelligible the sense or meaning of scripture. It became
apparent to me after a short period of time, that the
students were experiencing some difficulty in understanding
what I was saying. It wasn’t the content of what I was
saying, but rather it was my accent, my California accent.
And not only that, I was speaking too fast. Now I have been
teaching since 1970, mostly at the collegiate level. However
since 1994, I have been an itinerate preacher and teacher
offering courses in adult education. Needless to say I
stopped the class and inquired, “Am I going too fast?” They
laughed and asked me slow down. By the end of the day I was
cruising at the appropriate speed. But as I was soon to find
out, that was only part of the problem.
The next day I began to
explain the Jewish notion of kosher and how it related to
the teachings of Jesus. In the Gospel of Mark, Jesus changes
the classical laws concerning ritualistic purity by stating
in verse 7:15, “there is nothing outside a man which by
going into him can defile him; but the things which come out
of a man are what defiles him ... thus he declared all foods
clean.” I explained that for the Semite, the world was
composed of two distinct categorical realities: things you
could taste, touch, and handle and those you could not. This
referred to people, places, and things. For example, blood
is an arch defiling substance and as stated in the Book of
Leviticus, blood should never be eaten. Leviticus 17:14
states “for the life of every creature is the blood of it;
therefore I have said to the people of Israel you shall not
eat blood of any creature, for the life of every creature is
its blood; whoever eats it shall be cut off.” Jesus changes
this dietary teaching by declaring all foods to be clean.
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Dominican Novices with Fr.
Jude Eli |
At this point one of
the novices raised her hand and asked, “Why blood and not
cabbage?” When I heard the question, I thought to myself,
“What in heaven’s name is she talking about?” Maybe I didn’t
hear her correctly, or perhaps it was my accent acting up
again. So I asked her to explain what she meant by her
question. She told me very clearly that in some African
cultures it is vegetation, not blood, that is the source of
life for every creature. “Why does it have to be blood? We
all eat plants don’t we? Cabbage for us is the source of
life.” I immediately thought to myself, welcome to Africa.
This is a perfect
example of what the anthropologist calls the “etic” and
“emic” of society. These two terms refer to the correct use
of words or concepts that one society has in understanding
the words and concepts of another. For example, is shepherd
to sheep in Mid-Eastern society the same as Eskimo to seal
in First Nation society? Do the terms equivocate, that is
having two or more significations capable of double
interpretation? This is similar to what the biblical
theologian calls the referential fallacy, that is
attributing the same meaning, value, or signification of a
passage of scripture to another passage but coming from a
completely different time or theological context. To put it
simply, is the Judaism we experience today in our society
the same form of Judaism that Jesus experienced? The answer
is no. There are similarities of course, but not one-to-one
identification. The comparison is only by way of analogy.
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The Dominican Nuns of
Corpus Christi Monastery
show their appreciation to Fr. Jude for his class on
the Gospel of Mark |
And so it is with
cabbage and blood. This is a typical example of a
hermeneutical problem. How does a North American explain the
God of Israel to African nations? To be sure, our God is a
God for all peoples, nations, and lands. That is why the
Church is called to evangelize in a way that respects
cultural integrity while at the same time retains the
authenticity of the gospel.
This cabbage and blood
question embodies the very reason why the Church embraces
many modes of expressing the truth of its teaching.
As I finished that
first week of class and then went on to teach the Gospel of
Mark to the Dominican Nuns at Karen, I found myself once
again teaching a Jewish gospel in an African setting. It was
and is a challenge – a wonderful challenge.
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If you would like to
hear more of Fr. Jude Eli’s preaching,
a 30-minute dvd and a 30-minute vhs video
are available for purchase for $20 each through our
office.
Please include this form when ordering.
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The
Controversy is a 30-minute dvd that seeks
to explain why Jesus was condemned to death:
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What was the case against Jesus?
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Why was He executed?
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God in Exile
is a 30-minute vhs video that is a
contemporary examination of the Passion
Narratives
from a Christian perspective:
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The Conspiracy Against Jesus
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The Jewish and Roman Trials
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The Crucifixion, Death, and Burial
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A Theological Reflection |
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