The Impact of the Holocaust on Jewish TheologyNYU Press, 1 cze 2007 - 320 The theological problems facing those trying to respond to the Holocaust remain monumental. Both Jewish and Christian post-Auschwitz religious thought must grapple with profound questions, from how God allowed it to happen to the nature of evil. |
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... believe that the task of integrating the memory of the Shoah into the comprehensive historical memory of the Jewish people obligates us to assume the burden of facing the problem, at least by clarifying the intellectual and emotional ...
... believe that interpreting the mission of the Jewish people after the Shoah in these terms of normalization provides the profound explanation of the embarrassment surrounding the problem of chosenness today. The generation that matured ...
... believe they had already restored their people to normal parameters of safety, personal freedom, higher education, economic success, a high standard of living, and strong political status, both in Israel and in the western Diaspora, and ...
... believe that it can be recovered or reinterpreted in a convincing way, but the idea of a chosen people may become meaningful again, and indeed redeeming, if interpreted in terms of the ancient prophetic covenant that obligated the ...
... believe that the morality of the covenant is the only way to reunite the Jewish people, to root it in its sources and in its historical memory, and at the same time to respond to the challenge of egoistical individualism that has now ...
Spis treści
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Part II The Holocaust and the State of Israel | 209 |
About the Contributors | 301 |
Index of Names | 305 |
Index of Places | 309 |