{"id":2332,"date":"2015-06-25T09:25:57","date_gmt":"2015-06-25T14:25:57","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.scarboromissions.ca\/?page_id=2332"},"modified":"2015-08-31T12:14:58","modified_gmt":"2015-08-31T17:14:58","slug":"rabbi-dr-ruth-langer-1960","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.scarboromissions.ca\/interfaith-dialogue\/jewish-christian-relations\/rabbi-dr-ruth-langer-1960","title":{"rendered":"Rabbi Dr. Ruth Langer (1960- )"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"ruth_langer\"<\/a>One of the important insights that has emerged from more than a half-century of Jewish-Christian dialogue has been how deeply rooted significant elements of traditional Christian liturgy are in their Jewish origins. Whereas Christian\u00acity has often tended to try and distance itself from its Jewish pedigree, and stress its newness and distinctiveness, the less triumphalistic tone of Christianity since the Second World War has allowed for a new appreciation of how much Christian prayer-forms owe to their Jewish ancestry\u2014and howboth<\/i> Judaism and Christianity have developed from that ancestry since then, although in differing ways. In 1985, a set of official Vatican guidelines on Jewish-Christian relations noted (speaking primarily about Catholic liturgy):<\/p>\n