Truth and compassion : essays on Judaism and religion in memory of Rabbi Dr. Solomon Frank / edited by Howard Joseph, Jack N. Lightstone, and Michael D. Oppenheim.

Format
Book
Language
English
Εdition
1st ed.
Published/​Created
Waterloo, Ont., Canada : Published for the Canadian Corp. for Studies in Religion by Wilfrid Laurier University Press, c1983.
Description
1 online resource (224 p.)

Details

Subject(s)
Series
Summary note
These essays represent a multidisciplinary approach to the study of religion and, especially, Judaism. Setting aside common scholarly concerns with source criticism and history of interpretation, Shimon Levy argues that in Numbers 11 the redactor has forged diverse elements into a unity. Observing that much of what is said about Second Commonwealth Judaic culture is speculative, Jack Lightstone calls for radical revision of accepted portrayals of the period. Ira Robinson's study of al-Kirkisani's effort to differentiate magic and miracle while demonstrating the rationality of belief in miracle locates his thoughts in the context of Rabbinic and Muslim treatments of the subject. While historians of modern Judaism have acknowledged in the influence of Kant and Hegel, Rousseau, contends Michel Despland, is often overlooked; he opened the way for changes in social and religious life. In Walter Benjamin's philosophy of history Charles Davis finds a significant combining of elements from Kabbalistic and Marxist thought. Michael Oppenheim finds a common core of concerns addressed by modern Jewish philosophers: a struggle with modernity, identification with Jewish thought and values, and commitment to their Jewish communities. Gershon Hundert's "Reflections on the 'Whig' Interpretation of Jewish History" argues—vis-à-vis the Jerusalem school of Zionist historians—that the responsibility of national historians to their community can be fulfilled only by repudiating ideologies that may stand in the way of the search for truth. Howard Joseph's survey of teh extensive literature on the Holocaust indicates the options the authors find most worthy of continued focus. Jerome Eckstein critically examines one of the few published pieces by Joseph Soloveitchik, who combines the Talmudic genius of the Lithuanian Yeshiva world with mastery of the Western intellectual tradition. B. Barry Levy's study of the Artscroll series of translations of and commentaries on biblical literature examines the assumptions and methodology of the series and the hidden agenda that emerges. Frederick Bird's comparison of charity ethics in Judaism and Christianity draws attention to the imprint on these ethics of the formative period of each religion. The volume will be of interest to student of the Bible, Judaism, and Christianity.
Notes
Includes some text in Hebrew.
Bibliographic references
Includes bibliographical references.
Language note
English
Contents
  • Contents; Dedicatory Preface; Introduction; A Comparative Study of Charity in Christianity and Judaism; Judaism of the Second Commonwealth: Toward a Reform of the Scholarly Tradition; Jacob al-Kirkisani on the Reality of Magic and the Nature of the Miraculous: A Study in Tenth-Century Karaite Rationalism; A Key to Nineteenth-Century Critical Attitudes Towards Religion? The Work of Jean Jacques Rousseau; Walter Benjamin, The Mystical Materialist; Some Underlying Issues of Modern Jewish Philosophy; Reflections on the ""Whig"" Interpretation of Jewish History: Ma'assei banim siman le-'avot
  • Between Dignity and Redemption: A Critique of Soloveitchik's Adam I and Adam IIOur Torah, Your Torah, and Their Torah: An Evaluation of the Artscroll Phenomenon; Some Jewish Theological Reflections on the Holocaust; Basar Ve-Ruah, Dat U-Medinah: lyun Be-Bamidbar II
ISBN
  • 1-282-16696-4
  • 9786613810038
  • 0-88920-751-8
OCLC
1016767737
Doi
  • 10.51644/9780889207516
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