|
|
Books > Religion & Spirituality > Non-Christian religions > Judaism > General
Top World Guild Award Winner This book is about an idea-namely,
that Scripture mandates a Jewish return to the historical region of
Palestine-which in turn morphed into a political movement, rallied
around a popular slogan ("A country without a nation for a nation
without a country"), and eventually contributed to the
establishment of the state of Israel in 1948. Christian Zionism
continues to influence global politics, especially U.S. foreign
policy, and has deeply affected Jewish-Christian and
Muslim-Christian relations. Donald M. Lewis seeks to provide a
fair-minded, longitudinal study of this dynamic yet controversial
movement as he traces its lineage from biblical sources through the
Reformation to various movements of today. He explores Christian
Zionism's interaction with other movements, forces, and discourses,
especially in eschatological and political thought, and why it is
now flourishing beyond the English-speaking world. Throughout he
demonstrates how it has helped British and American Protestants
frame and shape their identity. A Short History of Christian
Zionism seeks to bring clarity and context to often-heated
discussions.
Bring Jewish values to life with an engaging blend of mitzvot
middot and timeless Jewish wisdom.
Throughout history, Jews have often been regarded, and treated, as
"strangers." In The Stranger in Early Modern and Modern Jewish
Tradition, authors from a wide variety of disciplines discuss how
the notion of "the stranger" can offer an integrative perspective
on Jewish identities, on the non-Jewish perceptions of Jews, and on
the relations between Jews and non-Jews in an innovative way.
Contributions from history, philosophy, religion, sociology,
literature, and the arts offer a new perspective on the Jewish
experience in early modern and modern times: in contact and
conflict, in processes of attribution and allegation, but also
self-reflection and negotiation, focused on the figure of the
stranger.
Two major interpretations of Mendelssohn's achievements have
attained prominence in recent works. One interpretation, defended
most recently by David Sorkin and Edward Breuer, casts Mendelssohn
as a Jewish traditionalist who uses the language of enlightened
German philosophy to bolster his pre-modern religious beliefs. The
other interpretation, defended by Allan Arkush, casts Mendelssohn
as a radical Deist who defends Judaism exoterically in order to
avoid arousing opposition from his co-religionists while
facilitating their social integration into enlightened European
society. In Faith and Freedom, Michah Gottlieb stakes out a middle
position. He argues that Mendelssohn defends pre-modern Jewish
religious concepts sincerely, but in so doing, unconsciously gives
them a humanistic valence appropriate to life in a diverse,
enlightened society. Gottlieb sees the Pantheism Controversy as
part of a broader assessment of Mendelssohn's theological-political
philosophy, framed in terms of Mendelssohn's relation to his two
greatest Jewish philosophical predecessors, Moses Maimonides
(1138-1204) and Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677). While Mendelssohn's
relation to Maimonides and Spinoza has been discussed sporadically,
Faith and Freedom is the first book-length treatment of this
subject. The connection is particularly instructive as both
Maimonides and Spinoza wrote major theological-political treatises
and exercised profound influences on Mendelssohn. Not surprisingly,
Mendelssohn is deeply ambivalent about both of these figures. He
reveres Maimonides for what he sees as his synthesis of Judaism
with secular knowledge, while seeming deeply disturbed by
Maimonides's elitism, his equivocation regarding many of the tenets
of theism, his espousing religious coercion, and his intolerant
view of Gentiles. As for Spinoza, Mendelssohn respects him as a
model for how a Jew can fruitfully contribute to science and
philosophy and be a model of ethical rectitude. But Mendelssohn
objects to Spinoza's atheism, advocacy of state religion, debunking
of Jewish chosenness, and rejection of Jewish law. For Mendelssohn,
reason best preserves human dignity and freedom by upholding the
individual's right to arrive at truth on their own and determine
their own beliefs independently of all authority. As such, reason
demands that the state respect diversity of thought and religious
expression. Mendelssohn interprets faith in the Jewish sense as
trust in God's providential goodness, arguing that reason affirms
this as well. But he recognizes the difficulty of establishing
metaphysical truth rationally and so in his final works adumbrates
a form of religious pragmatism. The faith-reason debate rages again
today. Gottlieb explores Mendelssohn's theological-political
thought with an eye to axiological and political dimensions of the
debate.
No matter what we would make of Jesus, says Schalom Ben-Chorin, he
was first a Jewish man in a Jewish land. Brother Jesus leads us
through the twists and turns of history to reveal the figure who
extends a "brotherly hand" to the author as a fellow Jew.
Ben-Chorin's reach is astounding as he moves easily between
literature, law, etymology, psychology, and theology to recover
"Jesus' picture from the Christian overpainting." A commanding
scholar of the historical Jesus who also devoted his life to
widening Jewish-Christian dialogue, Ben-Chorin ranges across such
events as the wedding at Cana, the Last Supper, and the crucifixion
to reveal, in contemporary Christianity, traces of the Jewish codes
and customs in which Jesus was immersed. Not only do we see how and
why these events also resonate with Jews, but we are brought closer
to Christianity in its primitive state: radical, directionless,
even pagan. Early in his book, Ben-Chorin writes, "the belief of
Jesus unifies us, but the belief in Jesus divides us." It is the
kind of paradox from which arise endless questions or, as
Ben-Chorin would have it, endless opportunities for Jews and
Christians to come together for meaningful, mutual discovery.
A Muslim curator and archivist who preserves in his native Timbuktu
the memory of its rabbi. An evangelical Kenyan who is amazed to
meet a living ""Israelite."" Indian Ocean islanders who maintain
the Jewish cemetery of escapees from Nazi Germany. These are just a
few of the encounters the author shares from his sojourns and
fieldwork. An engaging read in which the author combines the rigors
of academic research with a ""you are there"" delivery. Conveys
thirty-five years of social science fieldwork and reverential
travel in Sub-Saharan Africa. A great choice for the
ecumenical-minded traveller.
 |
Judaic Logic
(Hardcover)
Andrew Schumann; Contributions by Tzvee Zahavy, Avi Sion, Aviram Ravitsky, Stefan Goltzberg
|
R3,649
Discovery Miles 36 490
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
|
|
Judaic reasoning is discussed from the standpoint of modern logic.
Andrew Schumann defines Judaic logic, traces Aristotelian influence
on developing Jewish studies in Judaic reasoning, and shows the
non-Aristotelian core of fundamentals of Judaic logic. Further,
Schumann proposes some modern approaches to understanding and
formalizing Judaic reasoning, including Judaic semantics and
(non-Aristotelian) syllogistics.
Jewish thought is, in many ways, a paradox. Is it theology or is it
philosophy? Does it use universal methods to articulate Judaism's
particularity or does it justify Judaism's particularity with
appeals to illuminating the universal? These two sets of claims are
difficult if not impossible to reconcile, and their tension
reverberates throughout the length and breadth of Jewish
philosophical writing, from Saadya Gaon in the ninth century to
Emmanuel Levinas in the twentieth. Rather than assume, as most
scholars of Jewish philosophy do, that the terms "philosophy" and
"Judaism" simply belong together, Hughes explores the juxtaposition
and the creative tension that ensues from their cohabitation,
examining adroitly the historical, cultural, intellectual, and
religious filiations between Judaism and philosophy. Breaking with
received opinion, this book seeks to challenge the exclusionary,
particularist, and essentialist nature that is inherent to the
practice of something problematically referred to as "Jewish
philosophy." Hughes begins with the premise that Jewish philosophy
is impossible and begins the process of offering a sophisticated
and constructive rethinking of the discipline that avoids the
traditional extremes of universalism and particularism.
Marc Ellis maintains that the most vital questions about Judaism
are prefigured in the work of Elie Wiesel, Martin Buber, Abraham
Joshua Heschel, Hannah Arendt, and Emmanuel Levinas. Ellis's work
is framed by encounters with each thinker's work, focusing on
topics of God, the Holocaust, the prophetic legacy, philosophical
and ethical standpoints, and Jewish empowerment and dissent.Two
generations after the Holocaust and Israel's founding, Ellis argues
that the uncertain future of Judaism requires a deeply personal and
intellectual exploration of Jewish tradition and identity, in
conversation with the best philosophical and theological minds of
recent years.
This work offers a fresh reading of Paul's appropriation of Abraham
in Gal 3:6-29 against the background of Jewish data, especially
drawn from the writings of Philo of Alexandria. Philo's negotiation
on Abraham as the model proselyte and the founder of the Jewish
nation based on his trust in God's promise relative to the Law of
Moses provides a Jewish context for a corresponding debate
reflected in Galatians, and suggests that there were Jewish
antecedents that came close to Paul's reasoning in his own time.
This volume incorporates a number of new arguments in the context
of scholarly discussion of both Galatian 3 and some of the Philonic
texts, and demonstrates how the works of Philo can be applied
responsibly in New Testament scholarship.
The widespread assumption that Jewish religious tradition is
mediated through words, not pictures, has left Jewish art with no
significant role to play in Jewish theology and ethics. "Judaism
and the Visual Image" argues for a Jewish theology of image that,
among other things, helps us re-read the creation story in Genesis
1 and to question why images of Jewish women as religious subjects
appear to be doubly suppressed by the Second Commandment, when
images of observant male Jews have become legitimate, even iconic,
representations of Jewish holiness. Raphael further suggests that
'devout beholding' of images of the Holocaust is a corrective to
post-Holocaust theologies of divine absence from suffering that are
infused by a sub-theological aesthetic of the sublime. Raphael
concludes by proposing that the relationship between God and Israel
composes itself into a unitary dance or moving image by which each
generation participates in a processive revelation that is itself
the ultimate work of Jewish art.
Over half of all American Jewish children are being raised by
intermarried parents. This demographic group will have a tremendous
impact on American Judaism as it is lived and practiced in the
coming decades. To date, however, in both academic studies about
Judaism and in the popular imagination, such children and their
parents remain marginal. Jennifer A. Thompson takes a different
approach. In Jewish on Their Own Terms , she tells the stories of
intermarried couples, the rabbis and other Jewish educators who
work with them, and the conflicting public conversations about
intermarriage among American Jews. Thompson notes that in the
dominant Jewish cultural narrative, intermarriage symbolizes
individualism and assimilation. Talking about intermarriage allows
American Jews to discuss their anxieties about remaining
distinctively Jewish despite their success in assimilating into
American culture. In contrast, Thompson uses ethnography to
describe the compelling concerns of all of these parties and places
their anxieties firmly within the context of American religious
culture and morality. She explains how American and traditional
Jewish gender roles converge to put non-Jewish women in charge of
raising Jewish children. Interfaith couples are like other
Americans in often harboring contradictory notions of individual
autonomy, universal religious truths, and obligations to family and
history. Focusing on the lived experiences of these families,
Jewish on Their Own Terms provides a complex and insightful
portrait of intermarried couples and the new forms of American
Judaism that they are constructing.
In The Qumran Manuscripts of Lamentations: A Text-Critical Study,
the first large-scale investigation of the topic, Gideon Kotze
establishes how the four Lamentations manuscripts from Qumran
present the content of the biblical book. Kotze takes as his point
of departure the contributions of the Dead Sea scrolls to the
discipline of Old Testament textual criticism and treats the Qumran
manuscripts of Lamentations, the Masoretic text and the ancient
translations as witnesses to the content of the book and not only
as witnesses to earlier forms of its Hebrew text. By focusing the
analysis on variant readings and textual difficulties, the study
arrives at a better understanding of these manuscripts as
representatives of both the text and the content of Lamentations.
|
You may like...
Again Again
E Lockhart
Paperback
(1)
R196
Discovery Miles 1 960
The Glass Girl
Kathleen Glasgow
Paperback
R260
R232
Discovery Miles 2 320
|