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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... Schweid of the Hebrew University) I do not want to exaggerate the results they achieved. The key theological problems facing any Jewish (or other) thinker when trying to respond to the Holocaust remain monumental. 1 Editor's Introduction.
... problem of Jewish self-understanding after the Shoah because it emphasizes the emotional and intellectual difficulties that are involved in it. The idea of a chosen people established the self-consciousness of the Jewish people from its ...
... problem before the Shoah. Elsewhere1 I have described the background of relations among Judaism, Christianity, and Islam and the fatal role that the Jewish people had to play in the formation of the new collective identities of secular ...
... problem but also those cultural-political problems that modern Western civilization still failed to solve. Thus it became incumbent upon the Zionist movement to make the Jewish people like all the other nations, through a heroic ...
... problem of chosenness today. The generation that matured after the Shoah, both in Israel and in the Diaspora, experienced the process of restoring the life of their people in terms of normalization, internalizing for that sake gradually ...
Spis treści
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3 | |
Part II The Holocaust and the State of Israel | 209 |
About the Contributors | 301 |
Index of Names | 305 |
Index of Places | 309 |