Understanding Jewish Theology: Classical Issues and Modern PerspectivesThis book examines the religious experience of Judaism and comprehends both the perceptions of ordinary folks and the teachings of the creative elite–prophets, rabbis, philosophers, mystics, scholars, lawyers, and sages. To find out about the ordinary Jew one turns to the prayers he recites, the festivals he celebrates, the various ritual and mythic testimonies to the Jews’ shared religious imagination. But these do not constitute the whole of the Judaic tradition, only part of it. The other part comprises the way in which theological thinkers interpret religious experiences and make sense of them. How do they produce an account of the central issues of the Judaic religious life, make them accessible to reason and constitutive of a formidable intellectual tradition? The power of Judaism is to be laid open to the experience of the student not only through the analysis of the central issues in Judaic theology. They were able to see the theologians at work, to examine their modes of thought and procedures of argument, to see how they appeal to sacred Scriptures and mediate the claims of law, revelation, and tradition to their own time. |
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Table des matières
Part I | 7 |
Monotheism | 13 |
God and Man | 23 |
Torah | 30 |
Torah as Tradition | 43 |
Torah as a Way of Forming Culture | 53 |
Israel as the Chosen People | 63 |
The Holy Land in Judaic Theology | 73 |
Belief Beyond Despair | 163 |
The Holocaust and Contemporary Judaism | 177 |
New Conceptions of God | 195 |
Torah | 205 |
New Themes in the Study of Torah | 215 |
Israel | 225 |
The Jewish People in Metamorphosis | 231 |
Regaining Unity amid Diversity | 239 |
Part II | 89 |
Correspondences | 105 |
Ethics | 121 |
The Literature of the Law | 133 |
Part III | 149 |
A New View of Modernity | 249 |
Part IV | 259 |
Glossary | 271 |
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