Results for 'Hasidic'

78 found
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  1.  8
    The Hasidic Moses: a chapter in the history of Jewish interpretation.Aryeh Wineman - 2019 - Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications.
    In The Hasidic Moses, Aryeh Wineman invites readers to join him on a journey through various eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Hasidic texts that interpret the life of Moses. Such texts read their own accent on spirituality and innerness along with their conceptions of community and spiritual leadership into the biblical account of Moses. Wineman reveals the ways in which historical Hasidic voices interpreted both the Exodus from Egypt and the scene of Revelation at Sinai as statements concerning what (...)
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  2.  12
    A Hasidic Commentary on the Passover Haggadah for the New World.Ora Wiskind - 2023 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 31 (2):233-260.
    Todat Yehoshua (1935), a Hasidic commentary on the Passover Haggadah by Rabbi Yehoshua Heschel Rabinowitz of Monastyrishche, Ukraine, later of Brownsville, New York, offers an important perspective on Orthodox experience in North America in the interwar period. On his reading, the Haggadah invites an understanding of history that recognizes and contends with all that is radically unholy: from secularism, enlightenment, and Zionism in the Jewish camp, to Marxism, communism, anarchy, Nazism, and contemporary antisemitism. As a Hasidic tsadik and (...)
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  3.  55
    Hasidic mysticism as an activism.Jerome Gellman - 2006 - Religious Studies 42 (3):343-349.
    In her important work, Hasidism as Mysticism: Quietistic Elements in Eighteenth Century Hasidic Thought, the late Rivkah Schatz-Uffenheimer depicted early eighteenth-century Hasidism as a movement with pronounced ‘quietist tendencies’. In this paper I raise several difficulties with this thesis. These follow from social-activist features of early Hasidism as well as from a selection from the writings of leading early Hasidic masters. I conclude that a major stream of thought in early Hasidim was not quietist in tendency. Finally, I (...)
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  4.  30
    Hasidic Hallowing and Christian Consecration: Awakening to Authenticity in Denise Levertov's "Matins".Avis Hewitt - 1997 - Renascence 50 (1-2):97-107.
  5.  3
    The Hasidic Story: A Call for Narrative Religiosity.Tsippi Kauffman - 2014 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 22 (2):101-126.
  6.  14
    Ḥāsîd: Gunstgenoot.W. A. M. Beuken - 1972 - Bijdragen 33 (4):417-435.
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  7.  51
    Hasidic contraction: A model for interhemispheric dialogue.Mordechai Rotenberg - 1986 - Zygon 21 (2):201-217.
  8.  7
    Dialogue with deviance: the Hasidic ethic and the theory of social contraction.Mordechai Rotenberg - 1983 - Lanham: University Press of America.
    Mordechai Rotenberg, who is well known for his work on the pessimistic impact of Protestant ethics on the Western social sciences, presents here a systematic study derived from, and based on, Judeo-Hasidic ethics. Proceeding from the cabalistic-Hasidic concept of contraction (tzimtsum), according to which God's voluntary withdrawal into Himself to evacuate space for the world serves as a model for human behavior, Professor Rotenberg shows that it is not personal-social construction, but self- and social contraction, that explains how (...)
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  9.  4
    Ten Rungs: Collected Hasidic Sayings.Martin Buber - 1947 - Routledge.
    The sacred tales and aphorisms collected here by Martin Buber have their origins in the traditional Hasidic metaphor of life as a ladder, reaching towards the divine by ascending rungs of perfection. Through Biblical riddles and interpretations, Jewish proverbs and spiritual meditations, they seek to awaken in the reader a full awareness of the urgency of the human condition, and of the great need for self-recognition and spiritual renewal.
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  10.  1
    Piety as Community: The Hasidic View.Sanford Pinsker - 1975 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 42.
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  11. Hope and despondency-hasidic view.M. Friedman - 1977 - Humanitas 13 (3):291-305.
     
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  12.  31
    David Patterson, Portraits: The Hasidic Legacy of Elie Wiesel. [REVIEW]Jonathan Nassim - 2021 - Religious Studies 1 (1):1-2.
    Review of David Patterson, Portraits: The Hasidic Legacy of Elie Wiesel.
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  13.  4
    “But I Will Tell of Their Deeds”: Retelling a Hasidic Tale about the Power of Storytelling.Levi Cooper - 2014 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 22 (2):127-163.
  14.  21
    Rabbinic Figures in Castilian Kabbalistic Pseudepigraphy: R. Yehudah He-Hasid and R. Elhanan of Corbeil.Ephraim Kanarfogel - 1994 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 3 (1):77-109.
  15. Sefer Be-Shaʻare Ha-Teshuvah: Ṿeʻadim Be-Sefer "Shaʻare Teshuvah" Lehe-Ḥasid Yonah Gerondi.Meʼir Lambersḳi - 2007 - Yerushalayim: "Yefeh nof". Edited by Jonah ben Abraham Gerondi.
     
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  16.  7
    Suffering Time: Philosophical, Kabbalistic, and Ḥasidic Reflections on Temporality.Elliot R. Wolfson - 2021 - Boston: BRILL.
    No one theory of time is pursued in the essays of this volume, but a major theme that threads them together is Wolfson’s signature idea of the timeswerve as a linear circularity or a circular linearity, expressions that are meant to avoid the conventional split between the two temporal modalities of the line and the circle.
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  17.  30
    The Fear, the Trembling, and the Fire: Kierkegaard and Hasidic Masters on the Binding of Isaac.Jerome I. Gellman - 1993 - Upa.
    This book is an investigation into authenticity, certainty, and self-hood as they arise in the story of the binding of Isaac. Gellman provides a new interpretation of Kierkegaard with select Hasidic commentary. Contents: INTRODUCTION: Background to the Book; Hasidism and Existentialism; Preview of the Chapters; THE FEAR AND THE TREMBLING: Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling; The Problem of Hearing and the Problem of Choice; The 'Ethical' for Kierkegaard; The 'Voice of God' for Kierkegaard; The Resolution of the Problems; THE UNCERTAINTY: (...)
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  18.  3
    Inner religion in Jewish sources: a phenomenology of inner religious life and its manifestation from the Bible to Hasidic texts.Ron Margolin - 2020 - Boston: Academic Studies Press. Edited by Edward Levin.
    Is Judaism essentially a religion of laws and commandments? Or do its sources reflect significant attempts at addressing the individual's inner life, existential crises and spiritual experiences? Inner Religion in Jewish Sources offers a comprehensive exploration of inner life in the Jewish sources from the Bible to rabbinic literature, from Medieval Jewish philosophy to Kabbalistic writings and the Hasidic world, where it gained particularly potent expressions. Addressing the issue from the perspective of comparative religion, it seeks to emphasize the (...)
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  19.  15
    Mitzvot, lumi, comunitate în gândirea hasidicã moderna/ Mitzvot, Worlds, and Community in Modern Hasidic Thinking.Petru Moldovan - 2003 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 2 (5):158-167.
    Moshe Idel considers that the emergence of Hasidism is not the result of the confrontation between ancient and modern orientations. In M. Idel’s interpretation of the Hasidic phenomenon, a central point is ascribed to the inevitable encounter of the Hasidim masters with a variety of mystic literature. I have chosen to analyze three extremely complex and very important concepts regarding Jewish mystic phenomenon: mitzvoth, worlds, and community. In discussing these concepts I have tried to emphasize their practical and very (...)
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  20. Mitzvot, worlds, and community in modern Hasidic thinking.P. Moldovan - 2003 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 2 (5):158-167.
    Moshe Idel suggests that important forms of Jewish spirituality have emerged as syntheses between, on the one hand, religious endeavors, personalities, ideals, nomenclature and fears, and, on the other hand, different mystical models. I wish to emphasize the significance of three major concepts of the Hasidic movement, namely: “mizvot” , mizvot and the outer world, and the community regarded as totality of Israel, as well as the identity relations within this type of thinking.
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  21.  10
    Spiritual Pedagogy and Rhetoric in a Ḥasidic Homily: The Maʾor va-Shemesh on Parshat Qedoshim.Michael Fishbane - 2022 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 30 (1):114-129.
    A close analysis of a Ḥasidic homily by R. Kalonymos Kalman Epstein of Krakow, author of Maʾor va-Shemesh. The essay focuses on rhetoric, structure, and thematic content. The role of hermeneutics is engaged throughout.
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  22.  4
    A Hierarchy of Knowledge in a Hasidic Parable.Sheldon R. Isenberg - 1989 - Listening 24 (1):41-53.
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  23.  6
    The Fear, the Trembling, and the Fire: Kierkegaard and Hasidic Masters on the Binding of Isaac.J. M. Watkin - 1996 - Heythrop Journal 37 (4):500-501.
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  24.  15
    Meir ben Elijah of Vilna's Milhamoth Adonai: A late anti-hasidic polemic.Allan Nadler - 1992 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 1 (2):247-280.
  25.  8
    Samuel C. Heilman: Who Will Lead us? The Story of Five Hasidic Dynasties in America, Oakland, California: University of California Press 2017, XVII S. und 318 S. [REVIEW]Yizhak Ahren - 2018 - Zeitschrift für Religions- Und Geistesgeschichte 70 (3):302-303.
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  26. Funem baal ha-mayśeh: loyṭ di mesholim fun Baal Shem Ṭov ṿe-talmidaṿ.Gadi Pollack - 2009 - Monroe, N.Y.: Ḳinder shpil.
    Jewish parables from the Hasidic masters and their lessons are illustrated by the interactions of Fishel the beggar, the slick thief, the rich businessman, the fat governor, the Russian soldiers, and other village characters.
     
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  27.  31
    Hermeneutics in Hasidism.Moshe Idel - 2010 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 9 (25):3-16.
    The present article argues that the Hasidic exegesis differs dramatically from most of the Kabbalistic schools that preceded it. Symbolic exegesis based upon the importance of a theosophical understanding of divinity was relegated to the margin. One major characteristic of the Hasidic masters is that they preferred binary types of oppositions that in their view shape the discourse of the sacred texts. They became much less interested in the Bible as a reflection of the inner and dynamic life (...)
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  28.  9
    The mystical origins of Hasidism.Rachel Elior - 2006 - Portland, Or.: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization.
    The words 'hasid' and 'hasidism' have become so familiar to people interested in the Jewish world that little thought is given to understanding exactly what hasidism is or considering its spiritual and social consequences. What, for example, are the distinguishing features of hasidism? What innovations does it embody? How did its founders see it? Why did it arouse opposition? What is the essential nature of hasidic thought? What is its spiritual essence? What does its literature consist of? What typifies (...)
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  29. ha-Sipur ha-Ḥasidi ke-viṭui le-yesodot ha-Ḥasidut: nispaḥ: ʻiyunim be-mishnato shel "me ha-shiluaḥ".Reuven Raz - 2020 - Yerushalayim: Hotsaʼat Mosad ha-Rav Ḳuḳ.
     
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  30. Afn ṿeg tsu mir: hosṭ mir taḳe aveḳgenumen ales, ober ikh hob ales tsuriḳ geṭrofn: meyused af di mayśeh "Ben melekh u-ven shifḥah she-nitḥalfu" fun di seyfer Sipure mayśes̀ mo. ha-R. N. mi-Breslev.Chaim Ekstein - 2019 - [Kiryas, Joel, N.Y.?]: [Ḥayem Eḳshṭeyn]. Edited by Naḥman.
     
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  31. ʻErkhe musar be-sifrut ha-Ḥasidut.Isaiah Tishby - 1966 - Yerushalayim,: ha-Universitah ha-ʻIvrit, ha-Fakultah le-madʻe ha-ruaḥ, ha-Ḥug le-sifrut ʻIvrit.
     
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  32. A Buddhist Response to Olla Solomyak: “The World to Come: A Perspective”.Bronwyn Finnigan - forthcoming - In Yujin Nagasawa & Mohammad Saleh Zarepour (eds.), Global Dialogues in the Philosophy of Religion: From Religious Experience to the Afterlife. Oxford University Press.
    This chapter provides a Buddhist response to Olla Solomyak's (forthcoming) account of the afterlife from the perspective of Hasidic Judaism.
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  33. I and Tao: Martin Buber's Encounter with Chuang Tzu.Robert E. Allinson & Jonathan R. Herman - 1998 - Philosophy East and West 48 (3):529-534.
    This review confirms Herman’s work as a praiseworthy contribution to East-West and comparative philosophical literature. Due credit is given to Herman for providing English readers with access to Buber’s commentary on, a personal translation of, the Chuang-Tzu; Herman’s insight into the later influence of I and Thou on Buber’s understanding of Chuang-Tzu and Taoism is also appropriately commended. In latter half of this review, constructive criticisms of Herman’s work are put forward, such as formatting inconsistencies, a tendency toward verbosity and (...)
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  34. The Imperfect God.Ron Margolin - 2020 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 12 (2):65-87.
    This paper focuses on the Hasidic view, namely, that human flaws do not function as a barrier between a fallen humanity and a perfect deity, since the whole of creation stems from a divine act of self-contraction. Thus, we need not be discouraged by our own shortcomings, nor by those of our loved ones. Rather, seeing our flaws in the face of another should remind us that imperfection is an aspect of the God who created us. Such a positive (...)
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  35.  4
    Creating Angels: Stories of Tzedakah.Barbara Diamond Goldin - 1996 - Jason Aronson.
    Award-winning storyteller Barbara Diamond Goldin has collected and retold twenty-four stories about tzedakah in this inspiring volume. Some of these stories are based on oral tales, like "The Two Beggars," which is from Afghanistan, and "The Rabbi's Blessing," which is from Tunisia. Some stories, like "A Town of Baruchs" and "The Rabbi and the Rag Dealer" are Hasidic in origin, while others, like "Ox and Herbs" and "The Two Keys," are from much older sources. Some of the stories are (...)
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  36.  33
    Introduction: “More Trouble than They Are Worth”.Jeffrey M. Perl, Paul J. Griffiths, G. R. Evans & Clark Davis - 2009 - Common Knowledge 15 (1):1-6.
    This essay, which is the editor's introduction to part 1 of a multipart symposium on quietism, also constitutes his call for symposium papers. The symposium is meant be comprehensive. It is described as political and broadly cultural as well as religious, and in religious terms is said to cover not only the Catholic and Protestant quietisms (most properly so called) of the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, but also the proto-quietisms of the medieval Western church and reputedly quietist aspects of (...)
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  37.  16
    Sacramental Existence and Embodied Theology in Buber’s Representation of Ḥasidism.Sam Berrin Shonkoff - 2017 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 25 (1):131-161.
    _ Source: _Volume 25, Issue 1, pp 131 - 161 Martin Buber denied consistently that he was a theologian because he repudiated abstract discourse about God. However, he did affirm that intersubjective events in the world express theological truth, even if that truth cannot be possessed or professed thereafter as noetic content. In this paper I introduce a concept of “embodied theology” to elucidate this nuance in Buber’s religious thought, and I show how his Ḥasidic writings shed unique light on (...)
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  38.  25
    Three knights of faith on Job’s suffering and its defeat.N. Verbin - 2017 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 78 (4-5):382-395.
    The paper explores the manners in which suffering, both natural and moral suffering, is understood and defeated in the lives of different ‘knights of faith,’ who emerge in ‘conversation’ with the book of Job. I begin with Maimonides’ Job who emerges as a ‘knight of wisdom’; it is through wisdom that his suffering is defeated, dissolving into mere pain. I proceed with Kierkegaard’s Job, who emerges as a ‘knight of loving trust,’ who defeats suffering by seeing it as a divine (...)
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  39.  53
    Guiding Principles of Jewish Business Ethics.Ronald M. Green - 1997 - Business Ethics Quarterly 7 (2):21-30.
    This discussion develops six of the most important guiding principles of classical Jewish business ethics and illustrates their application to a complex recent case of product liability. These principles are: (1) the legitimacy of business activity and profit; (2) the divine origin and ordination of wealth (and hence the limits and obligations of human ownership); (3) the preeminent position in decision making given to the protection and preservation (sanctity) of human life; (4) the protection of consumers from commercial harm; (5) (...)
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  40.  13
    Opening Remarks on the History of Science in Yiddish.Alexandre Métraux - 2007 - Science in Context 20 (2):145-162.
    When introducing a collection of essays on Yiddish, Joseph Sherman asserted, among other things, that: Although the Nazi Holocaust effectively destroyed Yiddish together with the Jews of Eastern Europe for whom it was a lingua franca, the Yiddish language, its literature and culture have proven remarkably resilient. Against all odds, Yiddish has survived to become a focus of serious intellectual, artistic and scholarly activity in the sixty-odd years that have passed since the end of World War II. From linguistic and (...)
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  41.  5
    Isaiah Horowitz's Shnei Luhot Ha-Berit and the pietistic transformation of Jewish theology: revealing a concealed covenant.Joseph Citron - 2021 - Boston: Brill.
    In this book, Joseph Citron offers the first comprehensive analysis of Prague Rabbi Isaiah Horowitz's (1565-1629) magnum opus of Jewish ethical literature, the Shnei Luhot Ha-Berit. Citron's close philological analysis reveals the pioneering nature of the work in creating an organic Jewish theological system rooted in the mystical structures of Kabbalah, cultivating an orthodoxy in thought and legal practice based upon its principles. Emotion, psychology, self-actualisation and joy are all presented as essential facets of religious life, significantly influencing the 17th-century (...)
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  42.  3
    Fifty Key Jewish Thinkers.Dan Cohn-Sherbok - 1997 - New York: Routledge.
    This panoramic survey provides a first point of entry into the fascinating richness and complexity of the Jewish philosophical, theological and Kabbalistic tradition. Beginning in the first century with the Hellenistic philosopher Philo, Fifty Key Jewish Thinkers traces the major intellectual events of the last two thousand years, including the growth of Medieval Jewish philosophy, the early modern mystics, the radicals, the Hasidic leaders, the Enlightenment and secular and religious Zionism. From Maimonides to Martin Buber, and from Baruch Spinoza (...)
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  43.  19
    When the angels played: monadology and divine absconsion in Walter Benjamin.Elsa Costa - 2020 - Doctor Virtualis 15:123-170.
    Le interpretazioni di Walter Benjamin si estendono dall’estremo di considerarlo l’ultimo significativo uomo di lettere del periodo precedente alla seconda guerra mondiale fino all’estremo opposto di ritenerlo un rabbino hassidico. C’è accordo sul fatto che circa dal 1916-1920 Benjamin fu interessato alla teologia e alla metafisica ebraica e cristiana e che dal 1925 circa fino alla sua morte nel 1940 fu apertamente marxista e giunse fino alla quasi esclusione della metafisica. L’articolo individua le ambiguità della cosmologia teistica del primo Benjamin, (...)
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  44.  22
    Shekhinah as ‘shield’ to Israel: Refiguring the Role of Divine Presence in Jewish Tradition and the Shoah.Luke Devine - 2016 - Feminist Theology 25 (1):62-88.
    The biblical, talmudic, midrashic, and mystical traditions, as well as contemporary Jewish feminist theologies, reveal a plethora of Shekhinah images. If tracked historically these readings, while diverse, reveal continuities even across traditions. These include Shekhinah’s ‘immanence’, ‘presence’, ‘exile’, and shared ‘suffering’. Another vital continuity is Shekhinah’s function as protective ‘shield’. Accordingly, in her gendered theology of the Shoah Raphael argues that Shekhinah was ‘present but concealed in Auschwitz because her female face was yet unknowable to women’. Raphael’s selectivist approach appropriates (...)
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  45.  7
    Ṭevilah ba-shekhinah: ʻiyunim ḥadashim be-ḥeker ha-Ḥasidut = Immersion in Shekhinah: new studies in Hasidism.Tsippi Kauffman - 2021 - Tel Aviv: Hotsaʼat Idra.
    Doctrine of the distant tzaddik: mysticism, ethic, and politics -- Self-image and the Father-figure: Rabbi Nachman of Breslov on repairing the souls of the dead -- Two tzsddikim, Two women in labor, and one salvation: reading gender in Hasidic story -- 'Outside of the natural order': Temrel, the female Hasid -- Hasidic women: beyond egalitarianist discourse -- The Hasidic story: a call of narrative religiosity -- The Yamima method as a contemporary- Hasidic- female movement.
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  46.  48
    Abraham Joshua Heschel's Theology of Judaism and the Rewriting of Jewish Intellectual History.Reuven Kimelman - 2009 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 17 (2):207-238.
    Abraham Joshua Heschel's oeuvre deals with the continuum of Jewish religious consciousness from the biblical and rabbinic periods through the kabbalistic and Hasidic ones with regard to God's concern for humanity. The goal of this study is to show how such a “Nachmanidean” reading has partially displaced the discontinuous “Maimonidean” reading promoted by Yehezkel Kaufman, Ephraim Urbach, and Gershom Scholem. The result is that Heschel's understanding of the development of Jewish theologizing is more influential now than it was during (...)
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  47.  27
    Freedom and Moral Responsibility: General and Jewish Perspectives.Charles Harry Manekin & Menachem Marc Kellner (eds.) - 1997 - University Press of Maryland.
    Presents five new perspectives on the free will problem, and six interpretations of what Jewish thinkers of the past had to say about the problem. Topics include the concept of freedom that exists independently of a sense of self, arguments against the principle of alternative possibilities, the denial of free will in Hasidic thought, notions of choice held by Medieval Jewish and Islamic thinkers, and Maimonides' concepts of freedom and the sense of shame. Distributed by CDL Press. Annotation copyrighted (...)
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  48.  6
    Contemporary uses and forms of Hasidut.Shlomo Zuckier (ed.) - 2021 - Jerusalem: Urim Publications.
    Recent years have seen a shift in the approach to religious life among members of the Israeli Religious Zionist and the American Modern Orthodox communities. The trend towards spirituality, and to Hasidic teachings and practices in particular, is noteworthy and deserving of exploration. A range of leading American and Israeli thinkers - rabbis and philosophers, anthropologists and theologians - weigh in on these trends.
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  49.  14
    ‘The Golden Chain of Pious Rabbis’: the origin and development of Finnish Jewish Orthodoxy.Simo Muir & Riikka Tuori - 2019 - Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 30 (1):8-34.
    This article provides the first historiographical analysis of the origins of Jewish Orthodoxy in Helsinki and describes the development of the rabbinate from the establishment of the congregation in the late 1850s up to the early 1980s. The origins of the Finnish Jewish community lies in the nineteenth-century Russian army. The majority of Jewish soldiers in Helsinki originated from the realm of Lithuanian Jewish culture, that is, mainly non-Hasidic Jewish Orthodoxy that emerged in the late eighteenth century. Initially, the (...)
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  50.  17
    Investing in Parenthood.Jeffrey Blustein - 2018 - Hastings Center Report 48 (5):37-39.
    The recent child custody case Weisberger v Weisberger raises a number of ethical issues concerning the rights and responsibilities of parents. Chavie Weisberger, thirty‐five, and her husband, both members of an ultraorthodox Hasidic community, appeared before a religious court in 2008 to obtain a divorce. There are two sharply contrasting legal rulings in this case. Setting aside the legally significant fact that Chavie had signed the divorce agreement with the clause requiring her to raise her children Hasidic, which (...)
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