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The messianic idea that a redeemer sent by God will come to end
the suffering of a persecuted people and inaugurate a new age of
justice and peace has been one of the most powerful and influential
concepts given by the Jewish people to western civilization. This
book represents a sample of the most penetrating and provocative
scholarly interpretations of Jewish messianic movement from various
perspectives- historical, sociological, psychological, and
religious.
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Sermons and Addresses
Marc Saperstein
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R536
R445
Discovery Miles 4 450
Save R91 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Harold I. Saperstein served as rabbi of Temple Emanu-El of
Lynbrook, N.Y., from 1933 until his retirement in 1980. The
specific contours of his career reflect a sustained effort to use
the pulpit of this suburban temple to communicate a Jewish
perspective based on personal encounters with great issues of the
day-including the rise of Nazism and the Holocaust, the civil
rights era, the McCarthy era, and other turning points in American
history. The fifty-two sermons in this book have been selected,
introduced, and annotated by Marc Saperstein, whose award-winning
books on the history of Jewish preaching have established him as a
leading expert on this subject. No other book illustrates as
effectively the value of the sermon as a resource for understanding
the challenges faced by American Jews at some of the most dramatic
moments in the turbulent history of this century.
The Devil and the Jews presents the medieval conception of the Jew
as devil-literally and figuratively. Through documents, analysis,
and illustrations, the book exposes the full spectrum of the Jew's
demonization as devil, sorcerer, blasphemer, and ritual murderer;
as desecrator and heretic; as usurer infidel. Trachtenberg reveals,
in a chilling study, how these myths, peculiar to Christian Europe
in the late Middle Ages, still exist transmuted form today.
Wartime sermons reveal how Jews perceive themselves in relation to
the majority society and how Jewish and national values are
reconciled when the fate of a nation is at stake. They also
illustrate how rabbis guide their communities through the
challenges of their times. The sermons reproduced here were
delivered by American and British rabbis from across the Jewish
spectrum-Orthodox to Liberal, Ashkenazi and Sephardi-from the
Napoleonic Wars to the attacks of 9/11. Each sermon is prefaced by
a comprehensive introduction explaining the context in which it was
delivered. Detailed notes explain allusions unfamiliar to a
present-day readership and draw comparisons where appropriate to
similar passages in contemporary newspapers and other sermons. A
general introduction surveys more broadly the distinctive elements
of modern Jewish preaching-the new preaching occasions bound up
with the history of the countries in which Jews were living; new
modes for the dissemination of the sermons (printed pamphlets and
the Jewish and general press), and the emergence of women's voices
from the pulpit. It also surveys the distinctive themes of modern
Jewish sermons, including responses to Jewish suffering, social
justice, eulogies for national leaders, Zionism, and war. What
Jewish religious leaders said to their congregations when their
countries went to war (or, in some cases, were considering going to
war) raises questions of central significance for both modern
Jewish history and religious thinking in the civic context. What
evidence do these sermons present concerning the degree of
patriotism felt by Jews? Where and when do we find examples of
dissent from the policies taken by their governments, or explicit
criticism? What theological problems are raised by the preachers in
the context of unprecedented and unimagined destruction, and how do
they respond to these problems? How is the enemy presented in these
texts? How is the problem of Jews fighting and killing other Jews
addressed? Are the preachers functioning to articulate traditions
that challenge the consensus of the moment, or as instruments of
social control serving the needs of governments looking for
unquestioning support from their citizenry? In all these areas,
this book makes an important contribution to the American- and
Anglo-Jewish history of this period while also making available a
collection of mostly unknown Jewish texts produced at dramatic
moments of the past two centuries.
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